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Full text of "International Herald Tribune , 1987, France, English"

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?AuE 

OR MORS 


Skidding 
Of Dollar 
Tests Pact 

Hits Postwar Low 


A poGceman exa minin g Tncafay ftp Tpimmyi of car under which tbe bomb was placed. 


Kiosk 


Ebdle Measure 

ALGIERS (AP)— Inttnul 
exile . rc^otiksis -impos^ hL 


Iran Official Warns U.S. 
Not to Intervene in Gulf 


.Reuters 

LONDON — A 


■LONDON — A top Iranian navy bas 
leader warned die United Slates on ing a hit. 


By James M. Markham 

New York Tima Service 

BONN — A bomb exploded out- 
side a British officers club Monday 
night, injuring 31 persons a few 
hours after Prime Minister Marga- 
ret Thatcher bad concluded talks 
here with Chancellor Helmut Kohl 
West German and British inves- 
tigators said Tuesday that they 
were uncertain who had detonated 
the 220-pound (lOWtiJogram) ex- 
plosive, which was apparently 
slipped under a parked car outside 
an officers mess at the RhetndahJen 
base near the Dutch frontier. 

The bombing seemed likely to 
heighten concern that Western Eu- 
rope is facing a new upsurge of 
lenorism. After the assassination 
in Rome on Friday of General Li- 
do Giorgjcri, the Italian authorities 
have suggested that a “Euroierror- 
ist M network has been revived. 

Tbe explosion, which could be 
beard five miles (eight kilometers) 
away, blew out windows and sent 
glass shards flying into tbe mess 
where West German and British 
officers and their wives were cele- 
brating. Of the 31 persons hospital- 
ized Monday night, 27 were West 
Germans, and on Tuesday one 
British wo man and six Gomans 
remained in the hospital. 

Among them was Major General 
Hans Hosier, the German chief of 
staff for the Northern Army 
Group. 

An anonymous caller, speaking 
in English, telephoned the DQssel- 
dorf offices of DPA, the German 
news agency, 'shortly before the 
which the bomb was pl«<wl bomb exploded. But the journalist 

who took die call said he under- 
— stood little more than the word 

“bomb." A similar call was made to 

r liv'^ TT C the DOsseldorf police. - 
, TV CUTIS ■ [Tbe Irish Republican Army and 

an unknown West German group 
• y-y w /» separately daimed responsibility 

on £2 III m-l/ft Tuesday for the bombing, United 

CfIC lit UIUI Press International reported 

v [In Belfast, tbe IRA announced 

“Silkworm" in the strait off their through its political wing, Sinn 



'.Tuesday not TP intervene.' ifl the ' . The misdfea, capable of carrying 
Cfrdf, a day after W^shiajgMp said — a J JW0-ponn3 (455-k2rigram>-war- 
its w irriJnps were available to es- : bead, have a range of SO miles. 


navy base at Bandar Abbas, scot- Fein, that it carried out the bomb- 
ing a hit ■ ing to inflict a “devastating blow” 


fmt^ri^tsi^n^protested | cost Kuwaiti tankas through the 

t^.Preskfaa Chadfi Bcxrjedjd, l waterway. ■ 

the ^fidal-ne^ amiCT APS f - “If U.S. intervention occurs, the 


w hile wniiinigriv iliim mci tallies , 

[Hows earlier, the Britisthninis- 
ter of state for the armed forces. 


Sfczuo KoAoy^nh. MaoaiMd fan 

A screen flashing the sliding value of the dollar Tuesday in brisk m anting trade in Tokyo. 

EC Agrees on First Step to Bringing 
f Deep Discount 9 Air Fares to Europe 

Reuters minister, Herman De Groo. said Ccunmissioa Tor governments to 

BRUSSELS .TT- European Com- the 12 ministers reached agreement complete as* acceptable i'ackage. 
munity transport ministers reached on what conditions should be at- The EC transport commissioner. 


te^ Pscskfent ChadH Bergedid 
the offidal - neWs agehi^ APS 
reported " Tuesday, quoting a 
“idiabiesotirce.” * . 

T6d; agencysaid the.erik?, 
’^yho inunber .at least 22, ware 
«ree id return to their bones 
immwtiatoly from the remote 
repotr-of southern Algeria 
wherethe^hfldbeen ordered to 
live..: .vi 

- s^iake dry {ap> — 

Tbe- JJ.§: Mine .Safety and 
Heabfe' : Adm miit randn. in a 
preliminary report issued Tues- 
day,-citedUtah Power & L ight . 
Ca and Emery 'Mining Coip T ' 
far 34aflcged violations offep-. 
esal -ntine safety standards in 
the 1984 Wilberg Mine Gxe that 
dauned 27 lives. 


I Kuwait Said! to Seek Aid 

A marked increase in attacks on 


a conditional accord Tuesday on 


J ohn S tanley, told the Houseof rednong high European air fares, and so-called “deep discount,” or agreement “represents a big step 
Commons that the National Dem- breaking a deadlock on liberalizing very cheap, fares following months forward in making scheduled air 


on what conditions should be at- The EC transport commissioner, 
[ached to proposed new discount Stanley Clinton-Davis, said the 
and so-called “deep discount," or agreement “represents a Ing step 


entire worid will become insecure ships docking in Kuwait in the first 
fOT£be .Ainerii^* s^Hasfaeiiii few weeks of theyear prompted the 


Rafsanjaui, speaker of the Iranian Kuwaitis to ask botii the United 
parliament, “and the events of Leb- Stirte* “ d the Joyiet Umon for 
anon could be repeated for the protection of Gulf shipping, ac- 


77 Germany had claimed the bomb- 
Gcnnan federal proKoitor, Kurt 


ocratic Front for the Liberation of [he heavily regulated industry, offi- of negotiations. 


rials announ ced. 

Tbe agreement puts in place the 


“We arc now in take-off position 
for a more liberal sky in Europe,” 


travel widely available." 

Some diplomats forecast very 
difficult talks ahead on the overall 


anon could be repeated for the protection ot iron stepping, ac- 

Americans everywhere/’ ■ cording to Arab and diplomatic 

vicemen Tnrarep^fron^,.d^ 

bo^up^rhaad,^ 

„ d — -w -.1. tectioa. 


in Lebanon. • 

UJS: nrihtary officials disclosed 
in Washingtcn on Monday that tbe 
U.S. Navy, which has about 24 
warships in or near the Gulf, was 


R^umn, said the authorities did 

Sj&ifiS asssssat 

Tim« reported from^mo, addi^ were 

SffffKSKS assircaSroK 

1SC ~ 0a ', . . their West Gennan counterparts 

Six ships trading with Kuwait TFRROIL Pane 4 

were attacked by Iran in the first =** ltKKUK ' ri * ge 4 

few weeks of the year, as Tehran 


first element in a complex package said Mr. De Croo, who is presiding package, especially on proposals to 


of measures drawn up by the com- over ^ ln tVg 
nnmity’s Executive Commission. _ w . 
which wants airlines to end restric- S' 


The West German transport 


■niuiwuiBaiiiiiia w «»uiau«w- min - ap jQrg Wainke. hafled 
uve practices such as fare-fixmg * K r «.kih^. l oh 


and capacity-sharing agreements. 
But the new fares deal will not go 


the accord as a breakthrough- 
He said he expected an overall 


into effect until ministers have accord 3t the ministers’ next meet- 
agreed on the rest of the package. ■ ing at the end of June, the deadline 
The Belgian communications set last week by the European 


give smaller airlines greater access 
to the market. 

A further complication is strong 
opposition from the Executive 
Commission, tbe Netherlands and 
Ireland to a part of the fares agree- 
ment that they fear would effective- 
ly give governments the right to 
block economy fares proposed by 


Trade Tendons 

By Ferdinand Proczman 

International Herald Tribune 

FRANKFURT — The dollar 
reached a postwar low against Lhe 
yen Tuesday in what many traders 
linked to U.S. frustration with Ja- 
pan over trade issues. 

The U.S. currency also fell 
sharply against all other major cur- 
rencies in Europe before recovering 
late in the day on heavy interven- 
tion by central banks. 

The intervention pushed the dol- 
lar higher against European curren- 
cies in New York and helped it 
rebound from the day’s low of 
148.50 against the yen to close at 
149.10. 

The dose of 149. 10 in New York, 
down from 150.025 yea at the rad 
of trading Monday, was a postwar 
low, as was the close of 148.80 in 
Tokyo against Monday's 150.70. 

Monetary e xp e r ts said that the 
dollar's sudden weakness after a 
month of relative stability was re- 
lated to Washington's growing an- 
ger with Tokyo over bilateral trade 
disputes. 

“The dollar is the only weapon 
tbe U.S. has that can get the Japa- 
nese to react on trade,” one dealer 
said. "It looks like the administra- 
tion has decided to use it" 

Expms believe that tbe dollar’s 
bearish turn will continue in the 
near term. Dealers in Frankfurt 
predicted that tbe currency would 
test key psychological and techni- 
cal support at the 1.80 Deutsche 
mark level by the end of the week. 

in New York, the central bank 
intervention helped tbe dollar dose 
at 1.8223 DM, up fiom 1.8173 DM 
Monday, at 6.0675 French francs, 
up from 6.0525, and at 1-5230 Swiss 
francs, up from 1-5205. It also rose 
against the British pound, which 
ended at SI. 61 10. down from 
$1.6185 Monday. 

Despite the late recovery Tues- 
day, dealers said that the markets 
appeared to be ready to mount a 
major test of die currency agree- 
ment reached last month in Paris 
by six leading industrialized na- 
tions. 

“The significant thing is that the 
dollar hasn't risen above 150 yen." 
said one European dealer. “That 
still leaves tbe downside open." 

In London, tbe U.S. currency fell 
to 1.8105 DM marks and 6.0300 
French francs before recovering to 
1.8215 DM and 6.0675 francs at the 
close, up slightly from 1.8205 and 
6.0585 at Monday's finish. 

The early declines prompted 
purchases estimated at $1 billion to 
$1.5 billion by the Bank of Japan 
during trading in Tokyo and open- 


V/AICH 

SAL 


siM>i 





prepared to escort Kuwaiti tankers, pfd to pressure Kuwait not to 
regular tarosls of Iranian attacks in hold a piamied Islamic summit 
anoffshoot of the Gulf war. : meeting at the end of January, and 

Mr. Rafsanjani. in an interview Jo f or its nval, Iraq, m 

reported by the Iranian pres agen- * . i . 

CTONA^commentedonearii- thrnp. deteoerrted m 

ex U.S. disclosures that Iran had ^Jhechiu^ 
erected sites for Chinese-made Tanker Co„ Abdul Fatah al-Badr. 
“Silkworm" anti-drip missiles at ^matdephonemterviewTues- 
the Strait of Hormuz, the entrance became 100 percent sure 

to the Gulf. *** wlI1 I n ^ a ^, any ' 

^ , . one to interfere with the Gulf wa- 


Heavy Indian Rocket Fails First Test 


other EC airlines flying to their teTEL 


By Richard M. Weintraub experts say that the vast cadre of While India's communications 
Washington Pan Service wed-trained scientists and engi- satellites are among the world’s 

NEW DELHI India’s effort ncers arnon S tiie top six most sophisticated, combining tele- 

to launch its own large-scale said- or eight countries in the ability to vision transmission, comnmnica- 
lites received a severe jolt Tuesday develop a full-range space pro- lions and meteorological services in 
when its second-generation rocket one uiriL its launching technology 


. ... , Federal Reserve Bank in New 

The ^numyfare wM be usedas York, dealers said. 
jtajantaK* for somng cheap ^ Fcd ^ ^ 

Under .he agreement, airlines ^ 
would be able to set discount fares Ma^Lj^Mt^ery.vtceprest- 
anywhere from 65 percent to 00 dent and 1^ of emporate foreign 
percent of the economy tariff and f “. <3 ? co £ ^ 

deep-discount pricesat 45 percent 


most sophisticated, combmuig ide- anywhere from 65 percent Ic 90 
vision transtnission. comnmnica- perc®! of the economy tariff and 


The agency, received in London, [ers ^ 


quoted him as saying that Iran did 
not need missiles to close the strait. 


'X>ur respemse is definitely pcs*- 


faOed shortly after liftoff on its 
initial test 

The five-stage, 40-ton rocket 


gram. * ’ one unit, its launching technology 10 P®?™ 1 oftoe ecomimy fare. 

„ , . .is much less advanced. Mr. Clinton- Da vjs said the ma- 

S mailer versions of the rocket , jor innovation of the fares agree- 

that failed Tuesday have placed _Most major satelDies are pm mio was to jotpoduce tariffs at less 

sajrtite 0J6O » ^ptureds inlow ^ h^t^eB u^s sohd hteh 


24 miles (39 kilometers) wide ai Us nve to any means of firing ihat 
narrower, because “we can dose it ^vtga^ is protec^ sato Kfr. 

"S^^LreUrelon^. C’ 2 *K-"k3R 

eoS«t^t=^.mS& WOjMO barrels a day of etude oil 
and tbe small southern states have . 

a lesser interest compared with us Although Kuwait andGye o^er 
and therefore it is natural for ns to Gulf nations have banded together 
protect the security of the Strait of as the Gulf Cooperation Council 

enure 

'n&'Jt J^?riu^:rBna streu|th themselves to protect ship- 


MMTSdSSI.flSil orbii, aid Indian seiMiusls now do- 

designed to orbit a 300-pound agn and build most of their own a vriiM rocket program. The rocket ^ ^ available only to 

(iSSo™*) sarelhte. Offiaals mWhm. lie . tao U.WH “S ^ & SU^ng away for . w«£nd 


Gntf was within Iranian fire range ^ eu 

“and this U.S. haltyhoo win not P^ 


^MmSSSc. a British naval privately appealed to oO-imp ortm g 
source in the Gulf said Tuesday slates to prcHcci thor own mrerots 
Sattiie Iranians had test-fired a by keeping the shippinglanes open. 


in<eii»ad- Kuwaiti offiaals have 


state. 

Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi, a 
strong advocate of India's efforts in 
high technology, attended the 
larmching. He said the rocket fail- 
ure would not be a setback for the 
space program because “failure is 
pan of any mission of this magni- 
tude.” 

One of tbe poorest countries in 
the world, India is technologically 
advanced in some areas. Western 


said the rocket crashed in to the Bay mentions satellites are of Indian «aeratioa 1 one with , two 1 motors ^ier ^ 7 

of Bengal off the Sriharikota space design but were built by Ford ThTExecutive Commission 

center in southern Tamil Nadu Aerospace. One ot them w*s warned last week that if tbe airlines 

state. launched by the United Stales and ^ failed to meet tbe deadline, ot 

Pi itna Lfiviirfar Poiiv ft ^ •flOrbiL ^ ^ on <* agreed on measures that did not go 

Tbe Augmented Satellite Launch *T ...... ... far enough toward introducing 

Vehicle tested Tuesday is the pre- Although offiaals mio tbe cause genuine competition, it would 


Tbe Augmented Satellite Launch 
Vehicle tested Tuesday is the pre- 


tbose motors should have given 
way to tbe ignition of the main 
rocket. 


cursor of a huger rocket ihat India of the faihnre would have rto await 
hoped to have ready in lhe 1990s to study experts in New Delhi 

Isumdi communications and other ^ iheprohlem may he in a w 
■similar satellites in the 2000-pound integrated guidance system that 
range. Such satellites now can be ^as also bang tested Tuesday 


launched only by tbe United 
States, the Soviet Union or the Eu- 
ropean Space Agency. 


The rocket failure, they said, 
would cause setbacks in timing of 
See ROCKET, Page 4 


withdraw an offer to grant carriers 
temporary exemption from the 
ECs competition rules. 

The debate has pitied Britain, 
the Netherlands and Ireland, all 
strong advocates of far-reaching 
liberalization, against a majority of 
ihdr community partners. 


er they are acting solely for the 
Bank of Japan or are also interven- 
ing for themselves.” 

New York dealers were unable to 
estimate the volume of the Fed in- 
tervention. Other dealers said that 
tbe Bank of England also was buy- 
ing dollars in early New York deal- 
ings, and suggested that those pur- 
chases were on behalf of the Bank 
of Japan 

The governor of the Bank of Ja- 
pan, Satoshi Sumita, said Tuesday 
in a statement that the central bank 
would intervene if necessary in for- 
eign exchange markets to stabilize 
currency rates in dose cooperation 
with other major nations. 

The weak trend of the dollar 
Monday and Tuesday was trig- 
gered by U3. Treasury Secretary 
James A. Baker 3d’s remarks over 
See DOLLAR, Page 15 


- Nutritious beer may 

have been tbe reason oar 

mmakitc ancestors set- 
tled down and started 

■ growing grain to make 

• their brew- Page 4 

.GENEBAL NEWS 
^ffbe Soviet nrifitary has de- 
ployed lasers, according to a 
Pentagon review. Page 4. 

■ Pakistan said that Afghan 

jeis bombed a second village 
. . Monday, bringing the death' toU 
To 85 people.'- . Pag* 2 - 

■ Chad’s capture _of the . Libyan 
air base at Ouadi Doum repre- 
sents a severe setback for 
M riamhiar GadhafL Peg® 5. 

BUSINESS/RNANCE 
■Sooth Africa and commercial 


For Cleveland's Ukrainians and Jews, Demjanjuk Trial Stirs Up Old Enmity 


By Michael Dobbs 

WasUngtan Part Service 

Cl pypl AND — For three decades, John 
Demjanjuk seemed an unremarkable jnan 
anunremaxkable life. He puttered sbeut his gar- 
den, mended kids’ bicycles and attended the local 
Ukrainian Orthodox Church. Few people asked 
about his past • ... 

These days, a lot of 

about Mr. Demjaiguk s past. The retaedU eve- 

land auto worker bas spent the past five weeks m a 
Jerusalem courtroom on trial for crimes agains 

jerusarau tt ti»Um«ci cimn- 


“It was a terrible, terrible time," said Lucy Their ancestors may have been neighbors in the in Ohio in 1 952 from a refugee camp. He bought a 
7altchi«lr » Jewish emigre from Odessa who fled Ukraine, but Jews and Ukrainians had little to do house in Parma, an indosmal suburb whose ethmc 
before tbe advancing German Army in 1940. “Ev- whh each other there or in tbe United States, 'pie character is reflected m the domes of St. Vladi- 
ery nation has its heroes and collaborators — and Ukrainians settled within sight of the sprawling mir’s Church and signs such as th«ejx)inting out 
it’s true that some Ukrainians hid Jews. Unfortu- smokestack industries along Lake Erie. Tbe Jews. “Holowchak Funeral Home" and Dimitri s Res- 


nately, however, most of them worked for tbe the mainstay of tbe garment industry, created their 
Nazis." neighborhoods in middlft-dass residential districts 


But in the booses among the pirogi bars and 
onion-shaped church domes west of the river, 
ethnic Ukrainians talk of Jews collaborating with 


neighborhoods in middle-class residential districts 
across the Cuyahoga. 

When Mr. Demjanjuk was stripped of his U.S. 
citizenship in 1981, in proceedi ng s begun after 


Russians and Poles and of the devastating famine another Ukrainian immigrant raised questions 


caused by Stalin in the 1930s that killed as many as 
ax millio n Ukrainians. Many among the 50,000 


about his identity, hundreds of Jews and Ukraini- 
ans gathered outside the Cleveland courtroom, 


it 1 ' #' . the Trebtinte concentration canmann 

; V* 1 . BUSINESS/nNANCE thousands of Jews on tte 

Africa ta Te ff ed 

glflP.<£ bank creditors agreed to extend ■ woinu j s between Ukrainians and Jews 

? H\:'-.-V r r V Ac current limits on d*coun _ wh ^ mj |e< j hom the same part of Eastern 
• v \n l- 1 ,• . try’sdebt repayments. Page *5. g?® 0 f the same reasons, to opposite 

, * § Am»k»i Express Co. ap- g dcs 0 f tbe Cuyahoga River. 

' \y) . proved Ac sale of40 percent of of tbe city’s 70,000 Jewson the over’s 


humanity during World War IL Holocaust ^ el ^ n j c Ukrainians in Cleveland say they believe waving banners and hurling abuse at one anothw. 

vors have identified him as Ivan the im e. ^ Mr. Demjanjuk is the victimaf aplot between Since then, the two communities have m ai n tai n ed 

sadistic guard who operated the g as cnamoei ^ ^ jewi^j activists. a steady barrage of polemics through the news 

lhe TreW ^_ (X>£ ^^ U ^ “This case has created exactly wbat the Jews 

thousands of Jews ontite y , _ a[ want to prevent: more anti-Semitism,” said Bill Earlier, Mr. Demjanjuk bad seemed typical 


rie. The Jews, “Holowchak Funeral Home” and “Dimitri’s Res- 
, created their taurani" He speaks little English. 

mtial districts The pivotal event in Mr. Demjanjuk’s childhood 

. . c was the great famine of the early 1930s, conceived 
i.^n. f ' 5 ' ^ StaKn as a way of destroying the independent 
’begun after Ukrainian peasantry, collectivizing agnoilture 
ied questions and diverting the food supply to feed anew indus- 
77^°" trial work force. Mr. Demjanjuk told friends he 
a courtroOT, remonbered peasants in his village trading their 
LormanottOT. bouses for a single loaf of bread. Several manbers 
jgh'tiK^ews ** “ the caiastrophe. 

According to an undercover Israeli policeman 
emed typical shared a prison cdl with Mr. Demjanjuk 


migrated to Cleveland as an orphan after the war. 
“Nobody bad read ‘Mein Kampf* " 

After surrendering to Gennan forces without 
much of a fight, Mr. Demjanjuk and hundreds of 
thousands of other Red Army soldiers faced a 
choice between collaboration and slow starvation 
in prisoner-of-war camps. Some refused to cooper- 
ate with the Nazis and ended up in camps. Others 
joined a Ukrainian Army formed by the Germans 
to fight the Russians. And some were recruited as 
guards and ordaiies for the Nan death factories 
across Eastern Europe. 

Exactly what Mr. Demjanjuk did daring tbe 
crucial years 1942 to 1944 — when as many as a 
million people, most of them Jews, woe. killed at 
Treblinka — is die subject of the Jerusalem trial. 
His accusers ma i ntain that he was a particularly 
cruel guard at the camp in Poland. IBs defenders 


sssrsai" ^ 

lhe Ukr ainian Congress Committee, which reprc- the United States as “displaced persons" after the - famine on a Soviet leader of Jewish extraction, mistaken identity. 

Mts SSrf itaTS. Xn Ukrainians k the ^lTuscynecky dSribes ton as “a peasant Lazar M. KaganovidL TJe pdheen ^ . tddthe In the chaos that rnartel the ad £1 the w„, it 
, .Jr.2 _ -,u u. -r wtin luw JemsaletD court that Mr. Dennamuk had referred ^ difficult to sort tbe Nazi collaborators from 


; - ;!:**■ ' itsShearscm Lehman brokerage 
rabsidiary. PegelL 

mVS. durable goods ordrn 
. rose 6 pCtmil, the bigg 651 JJ* 
• ’V . & • - ■ crease irifive months. Page iL 


sides of the Cuyahoga River. 

For many of titedi/s 70,000 J^.onthen^ 

Eastern bank.- the Jerusalem trial rdmdles idoto- 
riesof their ancestors' sufferings: vioouspo^rom^ 
SjUaboration between tbe Ukramian mOrtia 
the Nazi Gestapo, the exodus of Jews from the 


United States. boy” with only four years of education who never 

The Ukrainian and Jewish communities in Wt much of an impression on anyone. His jamb 


Ukraine. 


Cleveland have similar roots — and similar mo- 
tives for leaving them. Both groups moved to the 
United States not only to survive but 10 raise their 
children in a land fire of persecution. They were 
attracted to such places as Oevdasd, Detroit and 
Pittsburgh during an indnstrial boom. 


priest. Father Stephen. Hankiewych, who knew 
him for 26 years, said he is a “practicing Christian 
who attended church regularly” and was devoted 
to his wife and two grown children. 

like many of his countrymen, Mr. Demjanjuk 
found a job with Ford Motor Co. when he arrived 


Jerusalem court that Mr. Demjanjuk had referred 
to Kaganovich as a zhid. a derogatory Ukrainian 
term for a Jew. 

U was against this background of Stalinist 
atrocities that many Ukrainians welcomed the 
Ge rman invasion of the Soviet Union in 1941. 
“When Hitler came, it was hurrah for Hitler.” said 
George ICulchytsky, a Ukrainian historian who 


In tbe chaos that marked the end of the war, it 
was difficult to son tbe Nazi collaborators from 
the heroes. As staunch anti-Communisls, the 
Ukrainians were welcomed by lhe United States at 
a lime when relations with the Soviet Union were 
deteriorating sharply. 

The deportation proceedings against Mr. Dem- 
janjuk were based in part on a Soviet-supplied 
See CLEVELAND, Page 4 


Ef.-r*f-?pr.7 r 







Page 2 


INTERNATIONAL HERALD TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY. MARCH 25, 1987 


Athens Mayor Eyes the Future , and Papandreou s Job 


By Alan Cowell 

fit w York Times Serrut 

ATHENS — The mayor of Athens, Milti- . . , , 

ades Evert, is a man whose ebullient self- is not one that Mr. Evert seeks to tuspeL^ 
confidence seems undaunted by the seeming , "Every cadet leaving the notary ^cmy 

ann msli w rwi which hiw office appears tp rest, thinks he can become a general. _ hesaicL^o 

every politician this ambition. And 1 
A conservative, he was voted into office ha*. ambition." 


Greek leadership, and some political ana- 
lysts call hi™ the heir apparent 


The more hnnKtoe concern, of Alto- and 
ians, he said, lay in rapid solutions to sad) 


as call him the heir apparent mans, he said, lay in rapid solutions io«ai - w thaasaD ds 

The impression of advancement problems as a pdlntiJ envuonmenL ever- issu'd w aSTm to be Christ 


snarled traffic and a growing crime rate. 

Yet such problems may also be turned to 
political advantage. 


The mayor, for instance^ “ ^'aon^ backing' for his challenger in re- 

life. to we« widely in tatoto as anti- 


Greek Jews, showing them to be Christians 
so they could avoid Nazi persecution. 

In the election campaign last year, Mr. 
Evert's predecessor, Mr. Beis. alluded daddy 

rv A . 1 1 ■ r 1.1a- AhallMlAM* m fB- 


last year in m election marked by a spfit ip Not he added, that he was in any fanny, long-praectai plan for a subway, or tans- marks that ww wddy mter^^as^- 


Socialist predecessor, Dimitris Beis, of vital j Q b with a tom of four years, two years 
Co mm u nis t support and forced a runoff, in beyond the next general elections 


which Mr. Evert prevailed. 


And such is the uneven division of power 
between the central authorities and the city 


in 1989, and with problems that seem far 
more obvious than their solutions. 

Athens has rapidly grown but without a 


that the mayor’s ambitious plans for a new development strategy. Yet, in the city and its 
look to Greece's clogged polluted capital environs, he said, 250,000 Greeks were un- 


• may be realized, to a tm- gp extent, only by employed, so that jobs had to be found, 

; spending and efforts of the Socialist govern- somehow, without further industrialization. 


incut of his adversary. Prime Minister An- 
dreas Papandreou. 


logical rites. Bun in pressing the government 
authorities to improve the lives of the city’s 
3.5 milli on to four million people, he may 
seek to finesse. his adversaries, taking credit 
for any improvements that are m a de and 
lambas ting them for those that are not. 

*Tm not going to come up against Papan- 
dreou for straight political reasons." he said. 
“But if 1 thmV that he does not move on with 


Mr. Evert sought to tuna the barbs against 
Mr. Beis by naming two Jews to the opposi- 
tion ticket. 

In a wmitar fann er, his critics Sought tO 
ffl r^maiiie him “bulldozer," a reference to a 
brash style reinforced by physical girth. He 
responded, he said, by having a campaign 
leaflet printed, picturing him with “an ex- 
pression like a bulldozer on my face" and a 


“The answer « that Ath^hould Seal bulldozer in the toiground, along vrith 

change,” he said, adding that it should be- a famfly Hnrrhmg architectural plans, as if to 


. come a commercial and service center for an 

Yet m the view of some Western diplomats entire region, the kind of place Beirut was 


Mr. Papandieou’s Cuba. Geo** was promise* component to nntoL 


andGrcek aiulytts, Mr. Ev^.^-ojd 


former minister of finance much given to a ^ ;irt ^ 1975 


laughter, is the prime can tender in the inter- niai, ^ ^ revenue to be 


od power plays of the New Democracy op- g a ^p#»H from tourists, who in recent years 


position for the leadership held by Constan- 
tine Mitsotakis. 


behalf erf bis father’s party. 

Mr. Evert’s father, by contrast, was police 


have tgnHwi to avoid the capital and “go chief of Athens during the Nazi occupation 

- ■ . .. _ & ■ i.L * 1 ^ aVa — * — . Ui »r fnwwlt/ kietAini fnr tuYnrk 


wife met in Athens while her father was 
director of the American Archeological 
School 

“Beware," he said smilingly, “of poEti- 



WORLD BRIEFS 


Soviet Ouietlv Reduces UN Missions 

for fe U.S. 

Sas-^^SSzSstsa 

from 2.75 to 170. over a period of two years. 


iffa 


I 0 ea 


Thar would make him a contender for the 


straight to the Aegean with their bathing of the city, a bit of family history for which _ Beware, he said smilm 
suits without passing through Athena” his critics have criticized him. Many Jews dans with Amen can wives. 


MRtiades Evert 


Hu Expected to Atend^qm^t'^ 

in January, an official ^ 'Wednesday as a member of . 

NataS People's Congress. ^ CS P^'^ U1 rajovs consataaHe , 
tod-Hnc Communist attitudes since his removal. 




Gonzalez Disparages 
No-Confidence Motion 








By Edward Schumacher 

New York Times Service 

MADRID — Prime Minister Fe- 


closing some of the mines that are 
losing money. 

In Madrid, thousands of medical 


trpe Gonzalez, confronted by a no- students from around the country 
confidence motion in parliament converged on the Ministry of Edu- 




Brazilian Bank Workers Begin Strike... 

aboiu 500,000 of the country's 700,000 bank workers had j 
ISwSj’K said to Banco <!o 

rftte Banco do Brasil to prevent bank workers from occupying 
buildings. 


and a spate of protests in the cation on Tuesday to demand a 
streets, counterattacked Tuesday greater say in curriculum chang es. 


night by challenging Ins opponents while many students in the nation's 


to come up with better policies. 

In his first news conference in 


universities continued a weeklong 
boycott of classes 10 demand more 


many months, Mr. GonzMez do- state spending and an abolition of 
fended his social and economic entrance examinations. 


S 


j 


Tamils Said to Kill 26 in Sri Lanka 


PubUc hospital doctors have 




■ . , ' J v _ l Ut/UW UUJUiUU UtA/lUlO Ufl »6 

meat dares to do more, and I am st±eduM a ^ for Wednesday, 
W^' SyMnS ' many min and ptowmimtoe 


, , , .. called their own strikes for Friday, 

Appcym g mtod m ri Conti - d Workm Commissions hi 
dank Mr. Gonrfta. a modaratt ^ for , Mtionwide "mobiliza- 


center-left Socialist, dismissed 
weeks of press reports that his gov- 
ernment was undergoing its great- 


don week" beginning April 3. The 
unions are generally demanding 7 
to 8 percent wage increases, while 






COLOMBO, Sri Lanka (UPI) — Tamil guerrillas shot and tilled 26 
mSwomen and cfaildmi in a nortJMentrahStoe 
would be nnhBrrTwt if they lined up outside iheu- homes, a senior bn 

Lankan poikie officer said Tuesday. „ 

Deputy Ins>ectOT General WA Samarawjckrema said coat only a 
handful of the resklents survival the massacre Monday m the village of 

Serunewa, in north-central Sri La nk a. „ _ . . . . 

The Tamils, who ate Hindu, are a minority in Si Lanka, wnere a 
majority of the people are Sinhalese. Tamil militants have fought once 
1983 for a separate stale in the north and east of the country, and about 
5,500 people have been killed. 


Marxists Gain in Indian State V oting 


est crisis since he was first elected & h old 

He'S^dtberKMxmfidence ^ 5 percent U combat infla- 


motzon as insignificant, warned 
that he would not tolerate street 


Mr. Gonz&lez said that man y of 


violence, conceded some real griev- the strikes were related to munka- 
ances on the pans of farmers and pal elections scheduled for June. 


students, and said the United He played down (he image that the 
States was not pressuring him in country was under a strike siege tty 


^ry,m 




l •’ ^ 4, • v * ^ 


the militar y base n^otiations here, saying that more strike days have 
“I don't fed particularly over- been lost in the past without much 
~i—i — j — .l ” l — :j public attention. 


whelmed at the moment,” he said. 

The leading conservative opposi- 
tion party. Popular Alliance, pre- 
sented a no-confidence motion in 
parliament on Monday night. If the 
government loses, it could be 
forced to call elections, though the 
likelihood of such a loss was con- 
sidered minor. The Socialists bold a 
solid parliamentary majority. 

“On the list of the government’s 
worries, the no-confidence motion 
comes under the heading of ‘mis- 
cellaneous,’ " Mr. Gonz&lez, 45, 
said in belittling the motion, which 
is scheduled for a debate tins week. 


INDONESIAN CAMPAIGN STARTS — Supporters 
of the Moslem-based United Development Party were 
jubilant as they arrived for a rally in Jakarta on Tues- 


day, die first official campaigning day for the national 
elections on April 23. Indonesan parties are using film 
stars and angers to attract the 94 milli on eligible voters. 


NEW DELHI (Reuters) — Marxist parties in three Indian states*#; 
ap pe are d to be <ttwu>ing their political control further than ever before, 

as results were counted Tbesday in state assembly elections. 

The gove rni ng Left Front in West Bengal, led by the Co mmunis t Party 
of India- Marxist, was heading for a landslide victory over Prime Ministar 
Rajiv Gandhi 's Congress (I) Patty, and in the far-south state of Kerala, 
the Left Democratic Front appeared likely to regain control from the 
United Democratic Front, dominated by Congress (I). 

Marxists alsn govern the small eastern state of Tripura, which next 
votes in 1988, and victories in Kerala and West Bengal would give them 
three states. Only is Jemma an d Kashmir was Congress heading for 
victory, thinks largely to its electoral nlKance with the National Confer- 
ence Party. 




Zia Asserts Pakistan Can Build Nuclear Bomb 


By Richard M. Wdntraub 

WmUnffon Post Service 


rials, who said they may respond 
by reviewing their own nuclear pro- 


military purposes. We have never deistood to have received assur- 


NEW DELHI — President Mo- 8 ““- India detonated a nude- 
hammed Zia ul-Haq of Pakistan »• device in 1974 and is thought to 

. - _ . • . v -L . i . r »_ j l 


said we are incapable erf doing this, ances from General Zia in Wash- 
We have said we have neither the ington "in December 1982 that 


has declared in a magazine inter- 
view that his country has developed 
the capability of building a nuclear 
weapon. But be reiterated his long- 
held public position that “Pakistan 


be well ahead of Pakistan in devel- 
oping nuclear weapons. 

In the magazine interview, in re- 


intention nor the desire. 


Pakistan would not develop mide- 


General Zia, responding to a ar weapons. Later UiL intelligence 
question about the debate in Con- assessments raised questions about 


Italian Aides 
Confer on 
Security 


Haig to Seek Republican Nomination 


spouse to a question about a Lon- 
don newspaper quoting a Belgian 


press over nuclear proliferation, whether the nature of those assur- 
said he believed that the “United ances, as understood bv Mr. Rea- 


•n. . . „ . .. is not in dulging in a miriaar <rpwi- scientist as saying P akis t ani srien- 

bS» 1 tilts had toldUm tbe country could 


SliL^T !^*io SLK . “PalS^te K^tyof tod a bom"b in a month, “(S 


Slates of America — the senators gan, was being adhered to. 
and congressmen — will look to the Under UJS. nuclear nonprolifer- 


Alliance, Amdnio Hcrnindez * ^~“ d : 

Manc tott) appea r before ^the Con- ^S^aaf^Sd "For to you don’t ha,c to 

Motoy- 3 , uole . “ stoto from Mpra. 


higher national interest rather than ation laws, aid must be halted to a 
this tiddly widefly nuclear pro- country shown to be importing nu- 


clear weapons technology. That 


A little-known national figure until 
recently, Mr. HernAndez Mancha is 


While General Zia and other Pa- You can virtually write today that 
ttani afficinlc hmm «nnirm nmii. Pakistan can build a bomb whenev- 


Earlier this month. The Observer legislation is up for congressional 
of London quoted Pakistan’s chief review, as is the new multibfllion- 


nuclear scientist, Abdel Qader dollar militarv and economic aid 


ROME — Italian security chiefs 
and senior ministers met Tuesday 
at an emergency meeting to discuss 
the slaying last week of Italy’s head 
of aerospace weapons, while efforts 
to form a new government ap- 
peared to be failing. 

The meeting, under a caretaker 


kistani officials have spoken preri- Pakistan can build a bomb whenev- Khan, as saying that his country program for Pakistan. In addition, prime ^ minister, Bettino CraxL in- 

oualy about the eaaerf teamh^; « « »ito. Whaf = tba difficulty • has succeeded in producing wea^- icte a 1985 Ui congratoai dndedhtorfl^stoaptoe 

Q about nuclear weapons lechnoloe^ about a bomb? ons-grade uranium and makin g a requirement. President Reagan forces, secret service chufs and the 

remarks inaoioterview S y°° ^ »«pred the nuclear bomb. Pakistan later de- must certify annually that RikSan defense, justice and mtenormnus- 

canoiaate to replace Mr. Kjonzmez. T -_ aa ,u_ technoloev. which Pakistan has. nied that Mr. Khan had made the does n«r hnv^ n nnnliwr (ers. 


ly marginal body in Spain. He will “7 about^ a temW v 

now speak before the congress as a ^^^.weap^wtoolo^ 

«£SWS’iaE i i5 

The no-confidence motion most expUrit acknowledeement yet you can do whatever you like. You 
comes after a wave of strikes and that research on can use it for peaceful purposes 


““T, “ T.u . 77 ^ that research on nuclear weapons is 

protests around the country since underway ^ 

iWn VurrimiihA tka uAaf Tka I ’ 


SlrtSS iLS' IT Ss Th miom. coupled wid, re- 


can use it for peaceful purposes 
only; you can also utilize [it] for 


ons-grade uranium and winking a requirement. President Reagan forces, secret service chiefs a nd t he 
nuclear bomb. Pakistan later de- must certify annually that Pakistan defense, justice and interior mxnis - 
nied that Mr. Khan had made the does not have a nuclear device. fors. 

statement, but his interviewers in- As a result of the Zia interview, The participants said they had 
sist be did. officials in New Delhi warned (hat discussed a document found Mon- 


President Ronald Reagan is un- a policy review could be under way. 


St £irr i h'T With > igh cent rem^ attibGted to £e 

country’s top nuclear srientist, ap- 


withworkW’ fanners, doctors, pear to place Pakistan’s nuclear rc- 


teachers and univenrity students. ^arefa rifom in a new context as 


A 24-hour general strike called the UJS. Congress considers legisla- 
Tuesday in (he province of Asturias tiou on nuclear nonproliferation 


The Associated Press 

ISLAMABAD, Pakistan — Pa- 
kistan announced Tuesday that Af- 


stroying more than 60 shops and 


es not have a nuclear device. ters - 

As a result of the Zia interview, The participants said they had 
Soak in New Delhi warned (hat discussed a document found Mon- 
idicy review could be under way. day in four major cities cl aimin g 
responsibility for the murder Fri- 
day of an air fence general, Lirio 

d 2<1 VlIlagG SedocunMits said the Union 
O of Fighting Communists, an off- 

Pakuian does not recognize the shoot of the Red Brigades urban 


NEW YORK (WP) — Alexan- 
der M. Ha^ Jr, a former secretary 
- of stale and commander of NATO 
forces in Europe, announced Tues- 
day that be wii] be a candidate for 
the 1988 Republican presidential 
nomination- - 

Mr. Haig, 62, was to make a two- 
day swing to New Hampshire and 
Iowa, the first two states to begin 
the selection of presidential dele- 
gates. He told about 1,100 support- 
ers at a fund-raising dinner Mon- 
day night: “What I offer Is 
leadership. Leadership to take our '?r 
country safety into the next decade, 
to build a more prosperous Ameri- 
ca, leadership to dedicate America 
to excellence in all fields, and lead- 
ership, above all, of an America 
wining and able to keep (he peace." 

Without directly referring to the 
Iran-contra affair, the former gen- 
eral said (hat a president lends 
“when he understands that openly 
communicated policies, even if se- 
cretly arrived at, are the only poli- 
cies that merit enduring support.” 




| lour! ■{ S 




'• -V\Vi 


z'*st 




Alexander M. Haig Jr, 


by the Conurmnist-led Workers along with a major new aid pro- Hsian announced Tuesday that Af- 
Conmiisaoos, a union federation, gram for Islamabad. That program phnn planes had bombed a second 
to support laid off coal miners is contingent on VS. admimstra- village, kming a total of 95 people 
erupted in violent dashes between tion assurances that Pakistan is not and wounding 123 in raids Mon- 
some miners and police. Several building a nuclear weapon. day, and it issued a tough warning 

people were reported injured. In Washington, the State De- Tuesday In the government of Af- 


Goveramcnt officials said that partment said Monday that it had 
nearly one- third of the workers in no comment on the interview. 


the traditionally militant region 
struck The government has been 


UNIVERSITY DEGREE 


For Lila. Antonie b Warii Experience 

Degrees tor people who want to be more effective 

end secure in their Jobs or Professions. 


Earn 4 BACHELOR’S, MASTER'S D > DOCTORATE 

bv miliiing vTjur Ida and avon. ajurotroncr Conner aoumalani 
- . oaont (resmap I or rour joti. inHilan, company hawing, mdunru' 

. caurs**. wnnrn on OuvraH (mmne* Wa rccipl coSeoe 
n-rtlSmX JL__ cr ® 01 ' 5 nan'at(B , «n w . , a^o , ’ N,fn 4 (nn inourrad 

Mnma Our gradusiai ate rfroynmo lor llwr aeniav e menn in Birpnen 
*» voThRM * , ' d wAI a.uu m. .r. complutmtl VOVI dvjrw 

..... roduiiamann wiihaul formal elauei or isninK at Mur a«vn imcb 

aapmanci i, siHI ma ... 

Mil loader 

Sur Dvgram i SanddetMMrisvunwanwivt treandaesdamnrtHsariancc'ard 
oorndoarj I no coil evataiaion 


j Pacific Western University i 

I 600 MAepulveda Bhd, Los Anaeles. CciHomla fOOW ■ Dept. 23 - USA I 


irances that Pakistan is not and wmmding 123 in raids Mon- 
; a nuclear weapon. day, and it issued a tough warning 

a sh i ngto n. the State De- Tuesday to the government of Af- 
il said Monday that it had ghanisian that it would strike back, 
neat on the interview. The Defense Ministry said Af- 

General Zia’s statements ghgn MiGs bombed the village of 
brought warnings by Indian offi- Angur Ada near the Afghan border 

— L. on Monday, killing 20 persons and 

wounding 22. Three Afghan MiGs 

. ....... .... — each dropped a bomb on the village 

np/^pCE I 200 miles (320 kilometers) south- 

west of Islamabad. 

It to bn mon effective I Officials said news of the attack 
pofeesions. | in the rcntole area had not reached 

s di doctorate tw,..* } the cajntal until Tuesday. 

'ZXZZ2S2-* , Ministry offirials also 

«nc« wa*ccamcoueae I said Tuesday that the toll from an 

I Afghan bombing raid Monday on 
mpiating vov, degree 1 the village of Tfaci Mangal had risen 

or un, " in ai youi n»m imm |o g 5 dead and 101 injured. First 

d oeadamn; Memt tar J I reports of the attack Monday had 

. . put the toll at 51 dead, bat some of 

liversity the wounded died overnight. 

Dow.Dept.n-u.sjv. Pakistani officials said Monday 


homes and a school Government Afghan government and it aids and guerrilla group, was responsible for 
officials said na palm bombs may shelters Moslem guerrillas fi ghting the killing General Giorgieri, head 
have been used in the attack on the Communist government in Ka- of Italy’s space and air weapons 
Teri Manga!. buL The Afghan government is procurement, was shot by two men 


For the Record 


Afghanistan’s charge d’affaires supported by about 1 15,000 Soviet on a motorcycle. 


was summoned to the Foreign 
Ministry on Tuesday and given a 


Meanwhile, efforts by the Chris- 


Afghanjets twice attacked Paid- tian Democratic prime minister- 


strong protest that wanted the Ka- stani territory late last month, kill- designate, Giulio Andreotti, to re- 


bul government to halt such attacks mg more than 100 people. 


Sheikh Afadettanud Sayeh, president of the Palestine National Council 
the Palestine Liberation Organization’s unofficial pariiament in eatilt 
called on its 426 members Tuesday to attend the counriTs 18th 
set for April 20 in Algiers. rSi 

A West German teadier, Wolfgang Rtatoch, 55, was sentenced 
Tuesday to two years m prison m DSssddorf for spying forEaS 
Germany. He was arrested last year in Cologne. (Reutan 






_ 


■r- vS£* 


or face the consequences. 

The statement said the Afghan 
attacks were “deliberate and pro- 
vocative." 


Bomb Kflln 7 in Lahore 


Pakistani officials said that a 
bomb hidden under a carpet ex- 


it added that Afghan forces were ploded early Tuesday during an 
responsible for “barbarous and anti-government, rally in Lahore, 


place the outgoing coalition 
government were foundering. 

The pohtidans were slready fac- 
ing criticism for a dispute that ap- 
pears to be focused more on a pow- 
er struggle between the majority 
Christian Democrats and Mr. 


TRAVEL UPDATE 


wanton attacks on defenseless dvfl- lolling seven persons and injuring Craxi’s Socialists than on the coun- 

ians,” and Pakistan reserved the more than 100 in Pakistan’s sec- try’s need for stability. 

right to retaliate. ond-Iargest city, United Press In- They also have beat attacked as 


Pakistan, which often has ternational reported from Islam- 
charged Afghanistan, with lmpio- abad. 


yoked attacks and territorial viola- , non „_i_ j Negotiativua wuvuk pmuiui 

tions, issued a much stronger pro- S^mSSETBlv hv STt«J °* coalition, which resigned on 
• »y SSS’E atfaM March 3, a_ dadhxto over 


They also have been attacked as 
having ocnnplaceatiy lowered their 
guard against urban r w mrigm. 


^ B € | gian n^i<HiaI arfine, resumed 75 percent of its n™,. J 
flights Tuesday when many employees on strike oveTSL^ tutdSS?** 
meat terms returned to work, a company spokesman sai<L ffi 
sdied^ed ffigte were opiating mS]. 

ground staff at the Brussels airport walked out Thursday ^ 

baggage handlers and caterers were stffl on strike. mgU9 - 

A heavy spring snowstorm Mt die central Plains of rfw» V Utiwi ^ 





Tuesday, and blmding wind-driven snow and drifts up todahfSS-^ 

metrn) high forced highways and schools to dose, stranded 

pulled down power lines. Manv roads in metatm v «ers aud 


W$k 

•-V’jrts - . 


^gvcH^ent that it would ^^SSSsNa 

’The entire responsibility for the ^ bla f f C ^ UTB ^ 1I _ 

serious consequences of such acts The group s leader,. ABama Eh- 
and unprovoked aggression against san Sahi Zaheer, and its vice presi- 


irnyet Ahhe-Hadis, an oppoahon lh ^ nj>r1 ^ T clergy referendum* 
group, on Pakistan's National Day ^uetaJunT racraMUiI,ls 


iTj aZ. — iu uuk, stranded travels : j 
(AP) 


nenuicinasiuuuuiieu. If Mr. Andreotti admits defeat. 

The group’s leader, ABama Eh- after two weeks of intense efforts to 
n Sahi Zaheer, and its vice presi- find a co mpr o m ise, general elec- 


Correction 


that Afghan Air Force MiGs twice Pakistani territory would rest on dent, Maulana Habibur Rehman, tkms are almost certain to foflow, a 
attacked the border village, de- the Kabul authorities," it said. were among the injured. year ahead of schedule. 


The two pictures 
were incorrectly ide 
were in fact Mr. Lai 


l s designs for his own label. ^ lane l- They 


T r O* 


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INTERNATIONAL HE1RALD TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, SEARCH 25, 1987 






Page 3 




erSets 

inU.S. 



. . _ ‘teaurffli 

-tf aiD S -patients, have dewed a 
-priority system to distribute the 
drag, wftjdus in short supply. 


«, — to several 

inooths because the drug u»V*8 sev- 
DWttths. to A2iT 

or flzufethymidine, was approved 
to sale under the- brand mm, 
trowr by the Food and Drag'- Ad- 
nnauttatiotk on Friday. - ■ 

1 Rto been ahoiw to ward oil the 

infections that kin people wifh-ao- 
(juired immune deficiency syn- 
: ; drome aud proloog their Eves, but 
i ‘^unotioKi It also has tone side 
- suppression of 

• the bane marrow that results in a 
•- -decrease in the production of red 
. = and white Mood ceBsl 

The disease is caused by a virus 


from the Burroughs Wellcome 
plant in Greenville, North Caroli- 
na. 

The recommended dose of Re- 
trovir wfll be two capsules every 
roar hours. New suppEes of the 
drug' will have to be reordered ev- 
ery 23 days. 

Mr. Dneyer said the company 
would monitor reorders to make 
sure the code number system is not 
hang abused. 

Burroughs Wellcome officials 
also defended the price of die drug, 
expected to be S7JJ00 to 510,000 a 
year, saying it reflected the high 

COSt Of mali-mo £t_ 

■ Israeli Chums Advance 
An Israeli researcher said Tues- 
day he bad achieved positive results 

M — - A TT\f* r 


AMERICAN TOPICS 


Anti-Erosion Flan 
Ahead of Schedule 

Highly audible farmland is be- 
ing taken out of production under 
a federal conservation program. 
Io the past two years, nearly 20 
milliou acres (eight million hect- 
arcsVhavc been given over to grass 
and Trees. This is wdl ahead of 
■ schedule toward the goal of 40 
minion acres by 1990, more than 
10 percent of total UR. cropland. 

The program reverses the trend 
of therI970s, when soaring crop 
prices encouraged fanners to plow 
up hillsides and hedgerows, leav- 


ing such marg pnal land vulnerable 
to wind and v yater erosion. 

Now farm-irs get an average 
$51.17 an acre to convert land to 
uses not pror ie to erosion. Some 
b u si n essmen jfear a shrinkage of 
demand for s< red and implements, 
further depressing the jural econ- 
omy. but fanners favor the pro- 
gram. 

“We Wnd of like this old land,” 
said Jimmy N. Ward, 56, who 
farms in nor/them Missouri. “I 
want my graindsons to enjoy it 
too,” be to! Id The New York 
Tunes. , j 

The govern pent has been using 
production-dotting measures for 


half a century to support farm 
income, but this is the Cist en- 
acted for environmental reasons. 
It is intended to reduce not only 
erosion but agricultural pollution 
of water supplies and, eventually, 
surplus crop production. 


Short Takes 

The first seven Chinese to take a 
Lf-S. military training course have 
begun a 41-week study of torpedo 
maintenance at the U.S. Naval 
Training Center in Orlando. Flor- 
ida. The Washington Post reports. 
Beijing is buying U.S. anti-subma- 


rine torpedoes. China and Yugo- 
slavia are the only Communist 
countries to which the United 
States will seO weapons. China’s 
military relationship with the 
United Slates includes exchanges 
of high-level military visits and 
sales of UR. military supplies and 
technology. 

Businessmen are wary of the 
press but many concede that the 
press should be wary of them, ac- 
cording to a survey sponsored by 
Egon Zehnder International 
USA, a subsidiary of a Swiss- 
based management consulting 
firm. Of 107 corporate executives 
polled. 59 percent complained 
about journalists' lade of knowl- 
edge of the subject covered; 35 


percent about distortion, includ- 
ing sensationalism, misquoting 
and incomplete information; and 
15 percent about Mas. But 54 per- 
cent conceded that executives 
were not effective in dealing with 
the press and 42 percent said the 
press had good reason to be wary 
of business. 


John Wayne, staunch Repubfi* 
can though be was. Moody criti- 
cized Ronald Reagan for his oppo- 
sition to the Panama Canal 
treaties and supported Jimmy 
Carter, according to documents 
on file ai the Carter presidential 
library in Atlanta. Wayne, who 
died in 1979, was a close friend of 
the late Panamanian leader. Gen- 


eral Omar Torrijos Herrera. In a 
letter to Mr. Reagan dated Nov. 
11, 1977, a copy of which was sent 
to Mr. Carter, who was president 
at the time, the actor accused Mr. 
Reagan of spreading untruths 
about the canal treaties in letters 
to his sup porters. Wayne wrote, 
“Now I have taken your letter, 
and TD show you pomt by god- 
damn point in the treaty where 
you are misinforming people. If 
you continue these erroneous re- 
marks, someone wiD publicize 
your letter to prove that you are 
not as thorough in your reviewing 
of tins treaty as you say or are 
damned obtuse when it comes to 
reading the FuB liah Language.” 

—ARTHUR HIGBEE 


‘that attacks the body's defense sys- in treating AIDS victims with a 
tern against fatal infections and substance derived from egg yolk. 


State Dept. Says B udget Cuts Impair 
Monitoring of UJSjf. Prisoners Abroad 




^ kSasofet 


£ss *«ffak 

^ stiijn 


- N i2oaa!Ccife 


mioatum 



cancers. 

. . Patients who want Retrovir must 
' .have their doctors apply in writing 
. ttx the manufacturer and then use a 
•; secret code to GO prescriptions, of- 
■ fkdals of Burroughs WeBoame Co„ 
. Retrovir’s manufacturer, said 
'.'^Monday. They said the' program 
. .was designed to eoszrre the drug 

- goes to the sickest patients first. 

-_j» Patients will be eligible for the 
' W- drug if , thty have a history of pneu- 

mocystis carinfi jut ainym i a a par- 
‘ ashe-induccd respiratory infection 
common to those with AIDS, or a 
' count o£;2Q0 or fewer T-4 cells per 
. cubic milRmE ier of blood. T-4 cells 
■ 'are a critical component of the im- 
' ; mime system. A normal T-4 count 
. ’ is from 1,000 to 3,000, and patients 
■with fewer than 200 are usuti&y 
r , . seriously 3L\ • ' 

;. There are’ 14,000 patients with 
■advanced AIDS . in the United 

- Stales. Many more suffer from an 

■ earlier .stage of the called 

AIDS-related complex, niakmg the 
total number of patients who may 
• be riunMc for the drug at least 
. 41,000. 

V. Paul Dreyer, Burroughs Wefl- 
, Income product manager, said. the 
. 'company would be able to supply 
15,000 AIDS patients with the drug 
• immediately and hoped to have . 
. enough stock to accommodate 
30,000 patients by the end.of die 
-year. . 

A. spokesman for the national, 
nonprofit American Foundation 
;/or AIDS Researeh said the Bar- 

Burroughs Weflcome officials 
said that, begauting Wednesday, 
doctors will have .to apply to the 
company for. pemusMip to pre- 

- -scribe Rmzowc. : ’ . . 

Those patients the' company 

• -«• *■• 1 - 


Reuters reported from Td Aviv. 

Dr. Yehuda Slrnrnw^ assisty^t 
director of surgery at Rokach Hos- 
pital in Tel Aviv, told a radio inter- 
viewer, “What can be said about 
this medicine is that all patients are 
responding to the treatment and 
showing a meaningful improve- 
ment in their symptoms, whether 
it’s diarrhea, fever or hmg infec- 
tion, weakening or weight loss.” 

The substance, known as AL721, 
was developed by Professor Mdr 
Shmitsky of Israel's Weizmaim In- 
stitute, ori ginall y as a tnntvr treat- 
ment Mr. Shmitsky said the treat- 
ment worked by stripping 
cholesterol from AIDS-infected 
cells to prevent them from attack- 
ing healthy oefls, giving the body 
time to develop resistance to dis- 
ease. 


The Associated Press 

WASHINGTON — The State 
Department says that budget cuts 
are reducing the department's abil- 
ity to ensure humane treatment for 
1,388 Americans imprisoned 
abroad. 

At the end of 1986, American 
prisoners in 79 nations were serving 
sentences or awaiting trial on 
charges ranging from illegally en- 
tering a country to murder, accord- 
ing to a recent Stale Department 
report. A third of the prisoners 
were jailed for drug offenses. 

Mexico, with 313 Americans in 
jail, led the list, followed by Cana- 
da with 163, West Germany with 
166 and Britain with 88. 

There was little change in the 
total number of prisoners last year 
from 1985, ana the number of 
Americans arrested abroad during 
the year again was about 2,800. 


Budget cuts mandated by Con- 
gress, according to Secretary of 
State George P. Shultz, have re- 
duced the nu mber of prison visits 
that UR. con sular officers will be 
able to make. Additional proposed 
cuts would worsen the situation, he 
said. j 

The consular officials check on 
foreign compliance with civilized 
standards of ^incarceration, but do 
not uy to tdhield American law- 
breakers abi load, many of whom 

ane c riminal; ; 

There weife, however, 34 con- 
firmed case? of mistreatment of 
UR. citizens jin foreign custody last 
year. The Si ate Department is re- 
quired to prr event such incidents or 
make sure tfjiey are not repeated. 

“We beliewe frequent visits are 
necessary to assist with widely vari- 
ant judicial (systems, sluggish bu- 
reaucracies,; culture shock and 


Contras’ Southern Front Chii bf Quits 

Washington Past Service 

MIAMI — The top commander 
of URu-backed rebels fighting in 
southern Nicaragua has resigned 
and withdrawn from the war 
against the Sandmist government. 

Fernando Chamorro, 54, mili- 
tary chief of the rebels, or contras, 
on the. southern front, said in a 
Sta tement released over the week- 
end in Costa Rica that he is quit- 
ting because the movement is dom-. 
mated by the “narrow personal 
interests of -an opportunist clique.” 

Mr. Chamorro? s complaints ech- 
oed tharotfaitotha top rebel lead- 
er, Arturo Jbs£ Cruz, who resigned 
March 9 over differences with lead- 
en of the Nicaraguan Democratic 
Force, which operates in northern 
Nicaragua. With about 10,000 
fighters, it is by far the largest and 
strongest contra force. . 


But fighters dose to Mr. Cha- 
morro said he is not leaving as a 
result of any current political dis- 
pute^ but because his will to fight 
was eroded by years of bickering 
and frustration in the movement 

Mr. Chamorro’s resignation is 
not expected to weaken farther the 
already disorganized and strag- 
gling southern front, UR. officials 
and leaders of the contras stud. 

“He was only the titular head 
anyway,” said one UR. official. 
“For the last six months he’s been 
in Miami-” 

Six southern front commanders 


Intelligence ! Agency had blocked 
delivery of i any supplies to them 
from the SHOO million in U.S. aid 
voted by Congress last year. 

Meanwhille, Senate Democratic 
leaders lost i another battle to stop 
aid to the contras on Tuesday. But 
they they would continue to 
fight a fifibi bsts against the legisla- 
tion that v rould slop the aid and 
would conipel President Ronald 
Reagan to {account for millions of 
dollars in previous assistance. 

The vote [on ending the filibuster 
was 50-50, 10 votes short of the 60 
required. Tjhe filibuster is prevent- 


issued a coBtanunw ufe saying they ing action ( &n legislation that would 
will continue to fight. The com- freeze com ra aid until the adminis- 
manders, along with Mr. Out- {ration giv« a foil accounting of 
motto, broke in January with the previous x ijd. 
contra umbrella group, the United A first t ittempt to choke off the 
Nicaraguan Opposition, asserting filibuster f afled on Monday after a 
that its leaders and the UR. Central ' 46-45 vote : 


health problems,” Mr. Shultz said 
at a congressional bearing last 
week. 

“Unfortunately,” he added, “we 
simply do not have the travel mon- 
ey at a number of posts to be able 
to maintain the current schedule of 
visits where American citizens are 
incarcerated in prisons which re- 
quire any long-distance traveling” 

Over the past year, the depart- 
ment has announced plans to close 
14 consulates. Mr. Shultz said that 
more than 20 additional consulates 
will be shut if cuts are made in the 
department’s request of S2.7 billion 
for foreign affairs administration. 
Consular officers in the remaining 
posts would have to travel farther 
to visit some prisoners. 

John Adams, director of the 
State Department's Citizens Emer- 
gency Center, rqected suggestions 
that a program to aid and comfort 
lawbreakers might be a good candi- 
date for budget cutting. 

“Congress has made clear its 
concern' for Americans in prisons 
abroad,” Mr. Adams said. “It's not 
cnir job to make value judgments. 
These are Americans in trouble and 
it's our right to see that countries 
adhere to generally acceptable 
standards of behavior in treat- 
ment,” 

In Mexico, Jordan, Nicaragua, 
South Africa and Yugoslavia, con- 
sular officers said they bad con- 
finned two or more cases of mis- 
treatment lasL year and made 
appeals to the local governments to 
correct the alleged abuses. 

In Zambia, consular officers suc- 
ceeded in getting authorities to stop 
arresting Americans on suspicion 
of being spies for South Africa. 

In T hailan d where prisoners’ 
families are expected to provide 
meals, the United States buys food 
to American inmates 


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Page 4 


INTERNATIONAL HERALD TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 25, 1987 


U.S. Says Soviet Military Deploys Lasers 


C<mpi led bf Our Stuff From Dispatches 

WASHINGTON — Defense 
Secretary Caspar W. Weinberger, 
presenting ihe Pentagon's »nnv l 
review of Soviet military power, 
said Tuesday that Soviet lasers 
have inflicted casualties and dam- 
aged equipment in Afghanistan 
and other locations. 

Mr. Weinberger, summarizing 
the Defense Department’s sixth as- 
sessment of Soviet military capabil- 
ities, also said Moscow is “clearly 
dedicated” to fielding “a whole 
new generation” of mobile inter- 
continental ballistic missiles by the 
mid-1990s. 


The Soviet weapons drive, he 
said, also extends toits convention- 
al arsenal. Dozens of new MiG-29 
jet fighters, called Fulcrum by 
NATO, as well as tanks, artillery 
pieces and ships having been pro- 
duced over the past year, he said. 

“We’re competing with adynam- 
ic and expanding Soviet military 
threat,” Mr. Weinberger said at a 
news conference televised to Eu- 
rope. That was the case, he said “no 
matter who is general secretary** of 
the Soviet Communist Party and 
“no matter what public relations 
campaign is undertaken.” 

The assessment, titled “Soviet 


Military Power,” is bong issued at 
a time when the Reagan adminis- 
tration's military buildup faces its 
strongest opposition in Congress. 
It was released hours before Mr. 
Weinberger appeared before the 
House Aimed Service Committee 
to argue for the administration's 
request far a 3 percent increase, 
after inflation, in the military bud- 
get for fiscal 1988. 

The magazine-sized, 159-page 
publication contains data gathered 
and declassified by the Defense In- 
telligence Agency and depicts the 
stains of Soviet nuclear and con- 


Reagan Is Assailed by Conservative 
For Not Pressing SDI Deployment 


Bv Helen Dewar 
and Lou Cannon 

Washington Past Smite 

WASHINGTON — President 
Ronald Reagan, whose anti-missile 
defense strategy is under assault 
from leading Democrats, has come 
under sharp attack from a conser- 
vative Republican who accused the 
administration or providing only 
“incompetent, irresponsible talk” 
on the issue. 

The attack from Senator Mal- 
colm Wallop, Republican of Wyo- 
ming. in a speech Monday observ- 
ing the fourth anniversary of Mr. 


Reagan’s proposal for the Strategic 
Defense Initiative, came as the 


president reaffirmed his support 
for SDI in a way that appeared 
designed to reassure the Soviet 
Union while at the same time fend- 
ing off criticism from both left and 
right at borne. 

In a statement issued Monday by 
the White House, Mr. Reagan reit- 
erated that SDI would never be 
used for offensive purposes. He 
portrayed it as an "insurance po- 
licy" against ballistic missile attack 
and as a "•singularly effective in- 
strument " for getting Moscow to 


the aims control bargaining table. 

But Mr. Wallop attacked SDI as 
" thin gruel” and a “substitute” for 
actual development and deploy- 
ment of anti-missile weapons, a 
course favored by Mr. Wallop and 
other congressional conservatives 
who are planning a series of legisla- 
tive initiatives aimed at forcing the 
implementation of a strategic de- 
fease policy. 

These efforts will clash with 
those of more liberal Democrats 
and Republicans, who are seeking 
to fend off attempts by some mem- 
bers of the administration to rein- 
terpret the 1972 anti-ballistic mis- 
sile treaty in a way that would 
allow the testing and development 
of a space-based defense against 
missile attack. 

There have been signs, rein- 
forced by Monday's White House 
Statement, that the administration 
may be seeking to avoid getting 
caught in the cross fire by putting 
off the treaty-interpretation issue 
as long as posable. “We are not 
looking to do any immediate battle 
on this issue,” said a senior White 
House official. 


Since Howard H. Baker Jr. be- 
came the White House chief of staff 
three weeks ago, he has been work- 
ing closely with the national securi- 
ty adviser, Frank C. Carlucri, to 
avoid a confrontation on either 
SDI or the ABM Treaty, adminis- 
tration officials said. Mr. Cariucci 
drafted (he statement issued by the 
president on Monday. 

In a speech at an SDI anniversa- 
ry dinner. Mr. Wallop said it is not 
“our anniversary.” Rather, “it is 
the day that the drive for anti- 
missile defense was hijacked by the 
Reagan administration’s incompe- 
tent and unfaithful crew,” said Mr. 
Wallop, whose position on SDI 
commands relatively few votes in 
the Senate. 


In some of the strongest criticism 
of the administration from a con- 
servative Republican lawmaker, 
Mr. Wallop said: “In other words, 
the administration’s answer to the 
question. "Shall America be de- 
fended?' is ‘No. Not on our watch.’ 
This is one of the voy few things 
that this administration has said 
with brutal clarity.” 


vemional forces and research and 
development activities. 

Ota laser technology, the book 
states that “recent Sonet irradia- 
tion of Free World manned surveil- 
lance aircraft and ships could have 
caused serious eye damage to ob- 
servers.” 

Included is a picture of an “elec- 
tro-optic sensor laser devise" 
aboard a Soviet destroyer that “has 
been used to irradiate Western pa- 
trol aircraft.” 

A senior Defense Department 
official, in discussing that refer- 
ence, said, “We've had several re- 
ports from various parts of the 
weald — Middle Hast and other 
parts — indicating that either from 
Soviet equipment, Soviet vessels or 
Soviet-provided equipment, there 
have been incidents of lasering 
against ground equipment and air- 
craft.” 

The official said that while no 
U.S. personnel have been blinded, 
the reports have provided evidence 
of “an impact, both in terms of 
blinding pilots and in terms of 
some physical bunting.” 

As for nodear forces, the booklet 
asserts that more than 70 percent of 
the Soviet land-based, long-range 
missile force wiD be in hardened 
silos or mudff mobile by the mid- 
1990s. 

Moscow has increased to more 
than 100, from 70, the number of 
mobile, single- warhead SS-25 in- 
tercontinental ballistic missiles 
aimed at the United States and will 
soon deploy the large, rail-mobile 
SSX-24 I CBM, which carries 10 
warheads, the repost said. 

Another Defense Department 
official said that Ihe Soviet com- 
mitment to malting more ICBMs 
mobile, while hardening the silos of 
fixed ICBMs a gains t nuclear explo- 
sion, is the “most serious” of their 
military achievements in terms of 
the U.S .-Soviet balance 



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More Wealthy Americans Pay Taxes ^ 


The Associated Press 

WASHINGTON — The num- 
ber of wealthy Americans able to 
avoid paying federal income tax 
has dropped significantly, but 13 of 
every 1,000 still pay a smaller per- 
centage than an average middle- 
income family. 

On returns filed in 1985, accord- 
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of every 1,000 persons at that in- 
come level who filed returns. A 
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of 1,000, paid less than 10 percent 
of their earniny in federal income 
tax. 

The Treasury Department says a 
family of four with two wage earn- 
ers, a $40,000 income and average 
deductions paid 12 percent to the 
government on returns filed in 
1985. A typical single person earn- 
ing $30,000 paid 12 percent. 


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En gines Rose, rjrife of Alans Steen, at Beirut University 
College on Tuesday. Mr. Steen was seized at the college. 


Shamir Won’t Negotiate 
With Bostage’s Captors 


power. 

The United States does not have 
a mobile ICBM, but the adminis- 
tration has proposed basing 50 MX 
missiles with 10 warheads each 
aboard 25 six-car railroad trains, 
and has proposed budding 500 tin- 
!e-warh<ad Midge tman missiles 
t would be mounted on trucks 
hardened to withstand nuclear ex- 
plosion. 

The Pentagon report also said 
the Soviet Union has placed in op- 
eration the first of a new generation 
Delta TV-class missile submarine, 
and will soon deploy potent new 
ground- and sea-la unebed variants 
of nuclear-armed cruise missies. 

The Soviets are also in the midst 
of improving the accuracy and “le- 
thality” of the mobile, intermedi- 
ate-range SS-20 missiles deployed 
against Europe, it said. The Reagan 
administration has said it hopes to 
eliminate these missiles under a 
new arms control agreement. 

(UPJ, AP) 


The Associates Ij Press 

JERUSALEM — I Prime Minis- 
ter Yitzhak Shamir) rejected on 
Tuesday an offer to Negotiate with 
a Lebanese group thatj raid it would 
swap an American bqstage for 100 
Arabs held prisoner b y IsraeL 

“It is clear that thiri is blackmail 
and we won't enter ij'ito talks with 
these types Of organi: rations.” Mr. 
Shamir said. 

Mr. Shamir was a(ked if Israel 
would bold to its policy of refusing 
to negotiate with terrorist groups 
despite the claim Mcraday by Is- 
lamic Jihad for the liberation of 
Palestine that the hostage. Alarm 
Steen. 47, is ride and inay die with- 
in 10 days. 

“It’s not our fault,” Mr. Sbamir 
replicd. “We would tike to help 
him, but I don’t think we can help 
him” by negotiating an exchange. 

Mr. Steen was one of four pro- 
fessors abducted frcim the West 
Beirut campus of Bdi \ it University 
College Jan. 24 by gunmen poring 
as Lebanese police. 



(Coo tinned from Page 1) 
identity card, and many in Cleve- 
land’s Ukrainian community sus- 
pected a conspiracy'. 4# TTiis is mere- 
ly a test case for anyone who wants 
to open his mouth against the Sovi- 
et Union," said Mr. Liscynedcy of 
the Ukrainian Congrats. 

Suspicions that the Demjanjuk 
case is the “thin end of the wedge” 
have been fueled by reports that 
600 immigrants, most o f them East 
European, are under investigation 
for alleged war crimes. As Mr. 
Demjanjuk’s trial c-pened last 
month, the local news media car- 
ried prominent stories Eibout a new 
list of 74 suspected Naid criminals, 
including several in Cleveland. 
None of the suspects Was named. 

Rebutting the charge-- of complic- 
ity with the Soviets, Jev/ish commu- 
nity leaders in Clevdamd and Jus- 
tice Department in.vestigators 
point out that the identification 
card’s authenticity wsis upheld by 
the U.S. court that 5 stripped Mr, 
Denqanjuk of his citbjcnship. 

In the view of many Jewish activ- 
ists, Ukrainians have ■ : ocouraged a 
negative stereotype by identifying 
with Mr. Demjanjuk and champi- 
oning his cause. Ratlxer than con- 
sidering bis case indr t'idually, they 
contend, many Ukra giians regard- 
ed the decision to pit rsecute him as 
an assault on th en ’ community. 

At the Mid-Town * t avern in Par- 
ma, where old men ion bar stools 
natter to one another jin Ukrainian, 
Stefanie Chorna, the . proprietor, is 
angry about what shut considers to 
be distorted portrayals of her peo- 
ple as Nazi colla t»orau>rs. Her 
brother, she rays, wbs killed at the 
Majdanek concentration camp. 

“People talk about how we 
Ukrainians waved flajgs to greet the 
Germans when theji invaded the 
Ukraine,” she said. “But nobody 
mentions the way Je^vs popped up 
in good positions when the Com- 
munists came. They [suddenly ap- 
peared, nmning arrau id in red arm- 
bands." i 

Excluded from poetical life un- 


der the czars, many Jews joined the 
Communist Party. Ukrainians and 
Poles frequently point to the high 
proportion of Jews among the early 
Bolsheviks as having exacerbated 
anti-Semitism in Eastern Europe. 

While conceding that the Dem- 
janjuk case may be reawakening 
hostility among Ukrainians, Jewish 
leaders in Cleveland the risk must 
be taken if new generations are w 
learn about the Holocaust. They 
point out that Jews began seriously 
discussing Adolf Hitler's “final so- 
lution” in response to “revisionist” 
historians who asserted it had nev- 
er taken place. 

“It was only with the greatest of 
coaxing that the Holocaust survi- 
vors began to talk about it,” said 
Alvin Gray, a lawyer who has been 
involved in attempts to reconcile 
Jews and Ukrainians. “1 think it 
would dimmish freedom a little bit 
if we did not take this risk. It is vital 
that young people know history.” 

As the testimony unfolds in Jeru- 
salem, Mr. Kulchytsky, the Uk- 
raine historian, said a few Ukraini- 
ans are beginning to fed that Jews 
may have had a point when they 
decided to let their history “all 
hang out,” as he puts it Until now, 
he said, US. Ukrainians have been 
reluctant to talk about the great 
famine for fear of endangering 
their relatives in the Soviet Union. 

For many Ukrainians who sur- 
vived the Nazi concentration 
camps, as for many Jewish survi- 
vors, there was a sense that survival 
itself was somehow shameful — 
that the real heroes died. 

“My father was taken to Siberia 
in 1939,” Mr. Kulchytsky said. 
“My mother died of typhoid fever 
in 1942. My gran d father saved 
Jews from the Nazis. And now I 
find myself on the barricades trying 
to defend the honor of my people, 
which is being described as an an- 
cillary force of the Nazis.” 


**. 


Beer, Man, Civilize*™ 
Which Came 'Second.' 

U.S. Anthropologist Says Alco o 

Set Hunters on Road to Farming 


By William K. Stevens 

1 New York Tunes Service 

PHILADELPHIA -- Why, 
10.000 years or so ago, did people 
first settle down and go to all the 
trouble of sowfate cultivating and 
reaping crops? The question has 


archaeologists because once its an- 
swer is clear, they wiH know what 
sparked the long transformation of 
from wandering hunters 
into literate dry dwellers. 

Beer did it, argnes an anthropol- 
ogist at the University of Pennsyl- 
vania. 


The event that “primed the 
to this D 


In Washington, a While House 
spokesman said Monday that the 
United States would not “pressure 
any thud parties into giving in to 
terrorists’ demands.” 

In San Francisco, Mr. Steen’s 
brother, Bruce, offered Monday to 
trade places with the captive. 

Alarm Steen, from Boston, had 
become in in captivity and could 
die within 10 days, according to a 
statement delivered to a Beirut 
newspaper on Monday signed by 
the group. 

The statement was accompanied 
by a photograph of Robert Polhfll, 
one of the abducted teachers. 

Israel's long-stated policy has 
been to not negotiate with terror- 
ists. But this was abandoned for a 
series of exchanges with Palestinian 
groups in Lebanon. 

In November 1983, Israel freed 
4,000 Lebanese and Palestinian 
prisoners for six Israeli soldiers. In 
May 1985. about 1,050 prisoners 
were released for three Israeli sol- 
diers. 


pump,” according to tins new hy- 
pothesis, was the accidental discov- 
ery by prehistoric humans that wild 
wheat barley soaked in water 
to make gruel, if left out in the open 
air, did not spoil. Instead, natural 
yeast in the air converted it to a 
dark, bubbling brew that made 
whoever drank it fed good. On top 
of that, the brew made people ro- 
bust; at the time, it was second only 
to animal protein as a nutritional 

source. 

This combination of mood-alter- 
ing and nutritional properties 
would have been incentive en ough 
to canse neobihic ixunter-gatherars 
in Ihe Near East to begin cultivat- 
ing the grams, Solomon H. Katz 
contends in an article published 
this nvmtf i in Expedition, the jour- 
nal of the Museum of Archeolo- 
gy/ Anthropology at the University 
of Pennsylvania. 

“My argument,” Mr. Katz said 
in an interview, “is that the initial 
discovery of a stable way to pro- 
duce alcohol provided enormous 
motivation for continuing to go out 
and collect these seeds and try to 
get them to do better.” 

The ar gumen t is buttressed, Mr. 
Katz wrote in fris article, by the fact 
that “almost invariably, individ- 


uals and soriet.es aP^rtof^ 
enormous amounts ■ 

even risk" in the puismt of tnrad- 

-llering foods and beverages. ' 

Moreover, he 

necked storage vessels oTAe-tod 
rZ^ed to promote caibonatwo 
been found dating back tothe 
beginnings of neolithic objcs^TIhs 
S eSHTso common through tite . 
world that it’s in^ediW^ 

“Every time you have oneot there . 
narrow necks, you knowyou vcgpt 
something that’s keeping tire are 
and the oxygen outside and the ^ 
carbon dioxide inside. • ffr 

The presence of carbon mange • 
helped keep the brewaddift in trim 
protecting it from the development 
of toxic qualities. _ 

By the time the neolithic village 
culture of the Near East had 
evolved into the city-states of Sa- 
meria about 5.000 yeart a go, he 
said, beewlrinlring had been rased 
to a high status. The wand’s oldest 
recipe, written on Sumerian tablets, 
is for beer. Another tablet contains 
a hymn to the beer goddess, Nin- 
kast. 

Over the last two decades, spo- . 
ciaiists on the neolithic world have 
generally favored environ m ental, 
and ecological explanations for the 
birth of agriculture. For instance,!#,- 
has been commonly held that pop- 
ulation increases forced neahzhtc 
peoples to search for ways to ex- 
pand the food supply. But now, 
some scholars are begi nn ing to 
dpubt this explanation and are giv- 


ing more weight to cultural factors. 
While • ' ' ’ 


Mr. Katz's beer hypothe- 
sis is likely to attract interest, step-; 
rirism is already being expressed. 
“I would say it’s an ingredient in 
the mix of causal factors,” said 
Marvin Harris, an anthropologist 
at the University of Florida who is 
a theorist on cultural evolution, 
“but I wouldn’t want to put a kind 
of prime-mover status” on it. 


US. Court Overturns Curb* 
On f Indecent 9 Cable TV 


CLEVELAND: Old Antagonisms 


By A 1 Kamert 

Washington Part Service 

WASHINGTON — The Su- 
preme Court has, restricted the 
power of states to ban “indecent” 
programs on cable television, strik- 
ing down a Utah law that confined 

cable programming that is sexually 

explicit but not legally obscene to 
the brans of mjdnjghi to 7 A_M. 

The law, similar to statutes in 
nin e states and numerous CQffimn- 
nities, had been overturned by a 
lower court, which said it was 
vague and was a violation of the 
Fust Amendment of the UiL Con- 
stitution, which protects free 
speech. The Supreme Court af- 
firmed the ruling Monday bya vote 
of 7-2 without issuing an opinion. 

The action, according to lawyers 
on both sides, wiD make it difficult 
for states and communities to regu- 
late cable programs considered in- 
decent 

It is not expected to affect re- 
strictions on programs considered 
legally obscene: those that show or 
describe human sexnai or excretory 
functions, exposure of genitals, pu- 
bic area, buttocks, or any portion 
of the female breast below the top 
of die nipple. — 

Utah’s 1983 law was directed not 
only at X-rated or obscene movies 
but also at R-raied or less explicit 


programming that might be conrid-' 
ered offensive or indecent. Such 
optional programs generally are 
carried for additional monthly fees 
on some cable channels. 

_ The law, called the Utah Cable 
Television. P rogrammi ng Decency 
Act, allowed the state attorney gen- 
eral or any county or city attorney 
to bring a public nuisance action 
against anyone who “knowingly 
distributes indecent matwrial with- 
in this state over anyCabfetdevi- 
srori system or pay far viewing tele- 
vision programming.” 

A federal Judge struck it down as 
nP Co n altei t ipDte, saying that it was 
too vagne in defining what was in- 
decent, too broad in trying to ban 
oonobscene material and that it did 
not provide dear guidefines. Ttttt 
lOthUS. Circuit Coat of Appeal? 
upheld that ruling m September. • 

Bruce Ennis, a Washington at- 
torney who represents cable broad- 
casters, said the court’s action infir; 
cated that it would hold 
unconstitutional future state d- 
forts to regulate oonobscene pro-" 
gramimug. 

Utah’s attorney general, David 
Wilkinson, said he believed that' 
most states would wait to “see what 
changes cake place on the court in' 
the next two or three years” before 
trying to enact ainiinr laws. 


ROCKET: Setback in India 


(Coatimied from Page 1) 

the program but should not prove 
to be as damaging as recent failures 
in major Western space programs. 

“The success rate in testing new 
rockets is only about 30 percent, so 
this shouldn’t be considered such a 
bad thing,” an expert said 
In addition to its civilian space 
program, India also is believed to 
have a fairly advanced military 
rocketry program It is planning 
and developing of a new military 
rocket range in the state of eastern 
Orissa that should significantly ad- 
vance this effort. The United States 
reportedly is supplying electronic 
equipment for the Orissa range. 

India, like the United States in 
the early years, has kept its civilian 
and military progr a ms separate. 
The civilian program is structured 
along the lines of the U.S. National 


Aeronautics and Space Admims-. 
trabon. 


a conscious decision tha t 
alhws them to collaborate with 
other countries in their cavfliia 


r * program while still 
mf 


nriHtaiy effort insninterij 
an observer. 


The program's chief success, the 
Insat communications satellite. 


now 

ern 


\ plays a major role in the mod- 
Indian 


dian society, providing a na- 
tional television link, an improved 
long-distance phone system and 
enhanced meteorological services 
in a country that is still 70 percent, 
agricultural. 


The n«t satellite is scheduled ti> 
go up later this year on an Europe- 
an Ariane rocket. A U.S. shuttle is 
to launch another Indian satellite 
m about two years. 


TERROR: Blast Harts 31 at Base in West Germany 


1. 


Uganda Forces, Rebels Clash 

Reuters 

KAMPALA, Uganda — Gov- 
ernment forces repulsed a rebel at- 
tack on the northern town of Lira 
on Saturday, Radio Lrganda said 
Tuesday. The report said 225 rebels 
were killed in the dash. . 



College Creiillt for 
Work Experience 

Business • Engineering 
Education ■ 

Ean a bocMcr, ittoftr, . doctoral 
degree. Guided independents 
Study. O n e - o n- o ne foajSy -adviwra. 

■ Semhcn* Riwdeney. 

Csfi farno-«o** 
EvWualten* 1 

(213)27(1-1094 


(Conti nued from Page 1) 
said it remained unclear who was 
behind the blast 
Alexander PrechteL a spokes- 
man for the West German Prosecu- 
tor's Office, said (hat it was too 
early to say which group might 
have been responsible. “It would be 
wrong ax (his point to say that it 
was either the IRA or the RAF,” he 
said. RAF referred to the West 
Goman terrorist group Red Army 
Faction. 

Mr. Prechtd also said: “Judging 


by the fact that it was a car bomb 
and the size of the bomb, and con- 
tidering the object of the attnrfr 
one would suspect the Red Army 
Faction or f’ - ^ * ~ 


CLINIQUE LA METAIRIE 

20 minutes from Geneva 
1 260 Nyon - Switzerland 


International private cfinic for 
psychiatry, alcohol/ drug de- 
pendency and care of elderly. 

Tof. 22/611 set. Tlx. 419921 


Mrs. Thatcher had been in Boon 
for consultations with Mr. K oh l 
about her visit later this month to 
Moscow. Earher Monday, she had 
met w ith President Francois Mit- 
terrand in France. 

The evidence for a revived net- 
work of European terrorists is 
patchy. West German investigators 
say there are no indications rhnt 
French. Italian and German ex- 
tremists actually have conducted 
joint operations. But German offi- 
cials say that it appears there has 

been some pooling of logistics and 
even explosives by French and 
German groups. 

After the arrest of the top leader- 
ship of the French group Direct 
Action on. Feb. 21, the French po- 
lice found West German identity 
papera and license plates in a farm 


outwie Orleans where the four ex- 
trwnsts were captured, officials 
said. The police also rrnuijin 

SeWiwr 101 that - wl * 

toe German town of Maxdorf 

^^presumabty by German 


te tire farm, the French police 

SO rflVmn— ic J 


15 dynamite caps 


r Mme VTAJ 4 UU 11 C C 

Explosives that was 
ftojen fram Ecausriue in Belgium 


m 1984. 


PfeATH NOTICE 


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INTERNATIONAL HERALD TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 25, 1987 



Page 5 



s Cultural Star Fades 

Under Gorbachev, Moscow Is Setting Pace for die Arts 

V ^ “ 


By Bill Keller 

Nete. Ygrt Times Service 

LENINGRAD - Sprih 

Lcmngrad might wdl have 

toed 


wen is i n c lude the planned publics- gressive local leadership- The Mos- 
non of burned fiction by Boris Pas- cow party leader, Boris N. Yeltsin, 
tend; and VMmxr Nabokov; the is an exemplar of the Gorbachev 
&v the rftv «-!■- Sr? 5 ? ^ an and- style, and one of the most outspo- 

“ a ? tahru ^ alk^ncal film; and the ken preachers of glasnosL He has 
tUries^ld'riv^Krl^ at ^ sccn ’ pobbeanon of Anatoli exhorted the newspapers and pter- 

The nnrthm n n?*' N. RybakaVs novel Children of ary ionnialS'lo be daring, and they 

** **.-&*r These am political * ‘ 

J^aate. -facades of t Peter the ■ events, originating in the political 
vreat sctly on. the canals, and sets center. 

r!!° - of the Admiral- Outside the capital, even in a dtv 

** secn “ n ^y se^assured as Lenin- 

ctHorslor'windi bpst^oon^panics ' 


spand huge sums to invent nanny 
. Aviator fromrirab Moscow can- 
t»r help feelira, on a. first walk 
•along the stilj-fixxzen canals, that 
.Leningraders are enthled to their 
^Uef that they have achieved a 
hidier level of dvflization. 

-Bht swiKthing seems not- to be 
p ypp frghemThfcdtyrevaedas 
Russia's cultural oyster bed, the 
aty of Pushkin and Dostoyevsky, 
has not kept up with the pace of 
. change' set by Moscow under Mik- 
hail S. Gorbachev's banner of glas- 
nan, or openness, ' 

The impression is confirmed, 
grodgingly, by a variety of Lenin- 
graders and Westerners who know 
the city. Leningrad r emarry a trea- 
sure house of Russia's past, but 
Moscow, they say, is now where the 
action is in arts and letters, music 
and film. 

. ^Moscow has long been the Soviet 
-sowplace city, the place where the 
best actors and m usicians aspire to 
perform. But Leningrad's artists, 

- espeda&y its tmoffiaal and semi- 
official poets, bards, painters and 
jazz musicians, have {Hayed a stim- 
ulating role — Off Broadway to 
Moscow’s Broadway. It is easy to 
imagine that Leningrad's cultural 
scene would prosper tinder the cul- 
tural thaw. 

But many people in Leningrad 
agree (hat so far, glasnost, Mr. Gar 
hacbev’s slogan for the increased 
intellectual candor that has so titil- 
lated the West, has remained dis- 
proportionately a Moscow phe- 
nomenon. 

"‘There is nothing modi -going 
on," said a Leningrad filmmaker. 
,£■ In large. part that is because the 
celebrated intellectual events of the 
last year have not been products of 
a new creative renaissance so much 
as a poBtical.atticrdeaning. 

Those events have involved ei- 
ther the release of older works long 
suppressed, or newer works whose 
daring is judged less on artistic 
merit than by a willingness to tack- 
le formerly taboosubjects. Notable 


Leningrad 

remains a treasure 
house of Russia- s 
past, but 'there is 
nothing much 
going on,’ said a 
filmmaker. 


grad, politicians move more cau- 
tiously, waiting until they are cer- 
tain the signals from Moscow are 
unmistakable: 

According to Western diplo- 
mats, even after "Repentance," 
winch was suppressed for three 
years, opened m Moscow theaters, 
nervous party officials in Lenin- 
grad twice canceled the premiere 
before the film was opened in 10 
Leningrad theaters. 

In February, Boris F-ifman , di- 
rector of the Leningrad Theater of 
Modem Ballet, staged the premiere 
of his daring new Ballet of Mikhail 
Bulgakov’s "Master and Margari- 
ta” — not in his home theater, but 
in Moscow. Tire ballet uses a men- 
tal hospital as its metaphor for an- 
tral authority, and includes a 
“march of enthusiasts,” poking fun 
at the Communist fervor of the 
1930s. 

Two weeks ago, a Leningrad 
drear chose Moscow for its perfor- 
mance of Rachmaninoff's “Ves- 
pers,” a piece Western diplomats 
said had not been performed in 
Leningrad because it offended the 
Communist Party’s official distaste 
for liturgical music. 

*Tn the political structure” aaid 
a Leningrad music impresario; 
“Leningrad is^ provincial city, like 
Kaluga or Talk But culturally, 
Leningrad is not Kaluga or Tula, so 
the expectations are higher and the 
contradiction is more obvious." 

Moscow’s more liberal atmo- 
sphere also is encouraged by ag- 


pow scramble to outdo each other 
in pushing the limits of what is 
acceptable. 

Leningrad’s party chief, Yuri F. 
Solovyev, is from a more conserve 

tive mold. Originally a prbtfigfe of 
1 Grigori V. Romanov, Mr. Gorba- 
chev's rival for the leadership, he 
now marches to Mr. Gorbachev’s 
tone, but watches his step. 

Recently, a Western diplomat re- 
ported, Mr. Solovyev appeared be- 
fore a youth gathering and warned 
them against letting glasnost be- 
come chaos, and allowing “criti- 
dsnf to turn into “fault finding." 

“It was like ’two cheers for glas- 
nost,’ " said a Western diplomat 

The newspaper and magazines 
in Leningrad reflect that usain- 
gradskaya Pravda and Smeaa, the 
Young Conmumisis' newspaper, 
show little of the mild muckraking 
fever that bas hit the Moscow press. 

Even the Leningrad jazz and 
rock music scene, long uncontested 
as the center of the music under- 
ground ; has lost some of its vigor 
now that Soviet authorities, having 
failed to suppress rock music, have 
decided to embrace il 

Musicians say that, as in the fine 
arts, there has been a cathartic re- 
lease of materia] that once could be 
performed only in small dubs. But 
they say little genuinely original 
and exciting rock music has come 
outyet, in Leningrad or elsewhere. 

“There is no new stream of 
ideas," said Sergei Kuryokhin, a 
piano prodigy and avant-garde jazz 
musician. “People are being set 
free,' and it turns out they don't 
have much to say." 

Suzanne Masse, an expert on 
Russian cultural history who was in 
Leningrad this month to help open 
an exhibit of American art, said it 
was unfair to portray the city as 
intellectually sterile. 

The city’s poets, she contended, 
are stiD more interesting than Mos- 
cow's. And Leningrad nas the oily 
- independent artists’ cooperative, 
providing an outlet for experimen- 
tal painters whose work is still not 
approved. 

“I think it’s less seen here, but 
that's not because it’s not hoe,” 
she said. “Over the years, theirs has 
been a very conservative cultural 
establishment It’s a dry of tradi- 
tion. They care about the past” 



By Robert: j. Md^artncy . 

-BERLIN Each haB -of - this 

divided city is spurring up historic 
buildings, erecting new apartment 
houses and atg&xrizmgconcats and 
art shows in an effort to outdo the 
other in celebrating Bohn’s 750th 
anniversary.. . -■ -. 

-•lA subtle diplomatic tug-of-war 
i&o is under ^ way in a highly puMi- 
“war of invitations” between 
the East German president, Erich 
Honecker, and West Batin's may- 
or, Eberhard Dtepgen. 

■fiacb is considering whether to 
cross the Beriin Wall to attend offi- 
cial w w™ "ies, at the risk of odm- 
pr omiang longs tandin g legal pbsi- 
tions related to the status of the 


city. 

lost 


in all this is ihe fact that it 

apparently is not really Berlin’s 
750th anniversary. 

Adolf Hitler fixed tho date of the 
city’s founding at 1237 when he 
wanted a reason. 50 years ago to 
organize a 700th anniversary jubi- 
lee a year after the 1936 Summer 
Olympics in Berlin. 

The Nazis’ historical source was 
a document dated Oct 28, 1237, 
describing a dispute over how 
much church tax the margrave of 
Brandenburg owed the local bish- 
op. The problem is that the docu- 
ment mentioned only the commu- 
of Cfifln, on what is now an 
jyfimd in the Spree River in East 
Berlin. 

The earliest known reference to 
Batin came seven years lata, but 
Hiller considered the CfiUn refer- 
ence adequate since CflUn eventu- 
allv merged with Berlin. 

the city authorities. East ana 
West, now r have picked up whae 
Hitler left off. They are using the 
anniversary to revive interest in 
Berlin as a tourism and business 
center, and to burnish their contra- 
dictory claims ova what their re- 
spective parts of the rity represent. 

Ea/«h bas planned an interna- 
tional conference 

lined up a heavy rfKdulerfaitan- 

al events. There even are nvalboat 
pr ocessio ns on the Spree and the 

sriteof the si m ilar schedules, 
rfj^e important distinctions in 

^SS^autltorities,for 
iflScc, are using the event to 
push the idea that East 
lesriiimate heir to the city's tastoty 
capital dating from the tune of 

FI ^ 

recent years to restore a sense of 


vantage in this field because die 
division of Ihe city ii 1945 left 
Bertiri's fristoriccentcr. which- was 
mostly rabble at the time because 
of ADttd bombardments, in the 
eastern sector. The East German 
government is making the most of 
this by virtually rebriliamg the fam- 
ous SL Nicholas Church, the 
Ephraim Palace and other aid edi- 
ficesin time for Ibie amuvenaiy. - 

The government has brought in 
hundreds of Polish craftsmen and 
construction workers to help. 
There is a serious shortage of labor 
is East Beriin, and the Poles are 
considered expert restorers. 

TheEast Berliners also are trying 
to reinfoice their contention that 
East Beriin is part of East Germa- 
ny. Tbe United States, Britain and 
France, winch each have been re- 


sponsible for & third of West Berlin 
smee the end,.of World War IL 
zecpgnize East' Berlin as only the 
Soviet-con trolled sector of the city. 

Seeking to reinforce their claim, 
the East Germans have invited Mr. 
Diepgen, the West Beriin mayor, to 
the official state ceremony marking 
the anniversary in East Beriin on 
Oct. 23. 

The West Batinas, meanwhile, 
want to show that capitalism deliv- 
er more goods than socialism, and 
hope to reaffirm ritrir finks to the 
Western allies and West Germany. 

In the rivalry ova who can build 
the nicest new apartments, West 
Beriin has had constructed several 
blocks of brightly colored apart- 
ment houses near Checkpoint 
Charlie, the principal crossing 
point between the city’s halves. 



,„d Bits U.S. Town 

cAisocutiedPK* 

m Pennsylvania town 

homes eaflv, Tuesday 

fn j c airin; spread a cloud 

Ttucals over ihe 

Hid. No injuries were 



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The vrry »ul of Prance in the wry heart of London 





FAHD GETS ROYAL WELCOME — Queen Elizabeth n of Britain greeting King 
Fahd of Saudi Arabia at London’s Victoria Station on Tuesday as he arrives for a four- 
day visit. Tbe train carrying the kin g. Prince Charles and ins wife, Diana, was delayed en 
route from Gatwick Airport after a suspicious object was found under a railroad bridge. 


Chadians 9 Capture 
Of Libyan Air Base 
Is a Blow to Gadhafi 


Casey Getting Chemotherapy Treatment 


Wajhin/’lim Post Service 

WASHINGTON — Doctors al 
Georgetown University Medical 
Center have inserted tubes into the 
brain and stomach of the forma 
Central Intelligence Agency direc- 
tor, William J. Casey, to treat his 
ranrer and to feed Him, the hospital 
has reported. 

A tumor was removed from Mr. 
Casey’s brain on Dec. 18. 

Officials at Georgetown would 
not respond to specific questions 


about Mr. Casey's condition, other 
than to describe it as “stable.” Mr. 
Casey. 74, was readmitted to the 
hospital Friday and is expected to 
remain there another week, accord- 
ing to the statement released by 
hospital officials. 

He had been receiving radiation 
treatment, but several cancer spe- 
cialists had encouraged his physi- 
cians to complement it with chemo- 
therapy. 

Hospital spokesmen said after 


Mr. Casey's operation that he was 
having trouble speaking and had 
weakness on the right side of his 
body. 

Mr. Casey suffered a seizure 
Dec. 15 while be was at CIA head- 
quarters in Langley. Virginia. He 
was taken to the Georgetown hos- 
pital a day before be was scheduled 
to appear a second time before the 
Senate Select Committee on Intelli- 
gence to answer questions about 
Ihe Iran-contra affair. 


By Edward Cody 

Waihington Pott Service 

PARIS —Tbe capture by Chad- 
ian forces of tbe Libyan air base al 
Ouadi Doum is a major military 
and psychological victory that 
threatens to diminish Colonel 
Moammar Gadhafi’ s longstanding 
role in Chad, according to French 
and U.S. officials. 

French-supported troops loyal 
to President Hissfene Habrt cap- 
tured the main Libyan airstrip in 
Chad at a desert settlement in a 
fierce battle Sunday. Chad's forces 
captured an undisclosed number of 
tanks, armored personnel carriers 
and aircraft, a diplomat at the US. 
Embassy in Ndjamena, the Chad- 
ian capital, said Monday. 

Onadi Doom’s 12,500-foot 
(3.750-metcr) runway had made il 
the main Libyan logistics center in 
Chad, a forward base fa resupply 
flights to Libyan troops to the 
south and easL Its loss leaves Colo- 
nel Gadhafi's forces in Chad with 
no dependable supply route for 
Faya-Largeau, the last major Liby- 
an garrison in Chad south of the 
Tibesii mountain region near the 
border with Libya, a French mili- 
tary officer said. 

“This was an important victory 
for Habrfc," he said. 

“Gadhafi must be very embar- 
rassed — very," said the U.S. diplo- 
mat “Ouadi Doum was a strategic 
hinge for the Libyan presence 
here.” 

Libya has long claimed the Ao- 
7 jou strip, a slice of northernmost 
Chad that is rich in minerals. Libya 
annexed tbe area in 1975 and has 
supported various Chadian rebel 
groups in the 20 years of civil war. 

On Jan. 2. Mr. Habra’s forces 
drove the Libyan garrison from 
Fada, Colonel Gadhafi’s other 
main Chadian stronghold, and 


vowed to assert government con- 
trol over the entire northern regkm. 
About the same rime, the defection 
to Mr. Habri of Libya’s forma 
rebel allies under Gookotmi Oued- 
dtit left Colonel Gadhafi without 
control of the Tibesti mountains 

and, according to French officials, 
changed the war from a civil con- 
flict into a Chadian-Libyan one. 

With Mr. Habrfc now controlling 
Ouadi Doum, and with a resupply 
of French military equipment, gov- 
ernment forces are expected to seek 
next tQ attack Faya-La rgea u, Mr. 
Habra’s hometown and the princi- 
pal center in northern Choi still 
under Libyan controL 

The loss of Faya-Largeau would 
mark an important political defeat 
for Colonel Gadhafi, limiting his 
contr ol to the Aozou strip for the 
fixsL time in several years and rais- 
ing questions. about his ability to 
continue pursuing political and 
mili tary goals in Chad. 

France, which was Chad's colo- 
nial ruler, has played a mayor role 
in supporting Mr. Habre's govern- 
ment with funds, aims and advice. 

Earlier this month France in- 
creased the number of its troops in 
Chad to about 2J2Q0, backed by 
Jaguar and Mirage F-l fighter- 
bombas and Gazelle helicopters 
with misailig. Tbe French Defense 
Minis try said Monday that these 
troops did not participate in fight- 
ing for Ouadi Doum, but it ac- 
knowledged French logistical sup- 
port for Mr. Habre’s forces. 

The Reagan administration Has 
backed Mr. Habri’s forces eagerly, 
principally out of hostility toward 
Colonel Gadhafi and reluctance to 
see his influence spread. Washing- 
ton announced SIS million in spe- 
cial military aid last December, 
adding to a regular US. military 
aid program of $8 million. 


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WEDNESDAY, MARCH 25, 1987 



Into Dangerous Waters 


For years, Iran and Iraq have been at- 
tacking each other’s shipping in the Gulf’s 
“tanker war.” The Iranians, who are on the 
march but cannot match Iraq's air power, 
recently started moving op anti-ship mis- 
siles to control the moath of the Gulf. The 
U.S. government decided to bring op the 
Kitty Hawk and to accept a request by 
Kuwait to escort its ships through the Strait 
erf Hormuz. Thus a measurably greater pos- 
sibility now exists that the United States 
may become directly engaged in the war. 

There is a logic to the American decision. 
Iran threatens not only the survival of the 
Baghdad regime and- the stability of other 
Arab governments friendly to Washington 
hut also the flow of oil to the West The 
United States is asserting a legitimate inter- 
est in upholding free navigation in inter- 
national waters. The Reagan administra- 
tion has its own requirement, after its 
collapsed arms-for-hostages dealings with 
Iran, to show support for the Arab cause. 

Nonetheless, the fact is that Iran and Iraq 
have tried to choke off each other's vital 
maritime traffic. This poses a policy dilem- 
ma that Washington has not fully grasped. 
Under one professed goal, freedom of navi- 
gation, the United States should be even- 
handed and should restrain Iraq as well as 
Iran, since both countries interfere with 
navigation. But under a second purpose. 


support of American friends in the region, 
the United States unmistakably tilts toward 
Iraq, since Iraq is friendly and ban, al- 
though it is a strategic place, is not. 

Naturally, the Iraqis would be pleased to 
have the American fleet protecting their 
lifeline. Kuwait’s situation is more com- 
plex. While asking the United States for 
escort help, it sought balance by also asking 
the Soviet Union. Both said yes, but the 
Americans, who are not eager to admit the 
Soviets as a Gulf partner, would prefer to 
do the whole job themselves. 

Iran voices alarm at a pattern of Ameri- 
can conduct that could possibly cut its 
lifeline. It urges Washington to pursue free- 
dom of navigation for afl countries. Such a 
policy would stop Tehran from further at- 
tacks on Iraqi — and Kuwaiti — shipping. 
But, more important to Iran, it would keep 
the American navy from craning in effect to 
Iraq’s side. But that does not seem to be 
the way thing* are going. 

A striking turn of events is apparent At 
home the United States is still sorting out a 
failed initiative launched in part to gain 
strategic advantage in Iran. In the Gulf, the 
United States finds events drawing it out of 
its professed neutrality and into at least the 
edges of the tanker war, in support of Iraq. 
This is a moment tor extraordinary care. 

— THE WASHINGTON POST. 


Helpless in Thailand 


Thailand, seeing no end to providing asy- 
lum for Indochinese refugees, has turned 
against them with acts of extortion, brutal- 
ity and tifo-endangcring forced repatria- 
tion. The Thais have committed tire acts, 
yet the United States most share the blame; 
its deriiwwig role in this long-playing refu- 
gee story has contributed to the Thai frus- 
tration. A humane ending requires a recom- 
mitment from both Bangkok and Washing- 
ton to these hapless people. 

To the Thais, the West appears to have 
slopped honoring its pledge to resettle hun- 
dreds of thousands of refugees to whom 
T hailan d has given first asylum. The Thais 
have reacted sharply, dosing camps, pushing 
would-be entrants away and now, worst of 
&K forcing some refugees back to their 
homelands. (Tbiity-dghi Hmong tribesmen 
in a camp under United Nations protection 
were returned last week against their will to 
Laos, where their lives are clearly endan- 
gered. Bangkok contends that they were not 
refugees but anti-Communist guerrillas. But 
the gpemHos took first steps to become refu- 
gees once they entered the camps and laid 


down their arms.) And reports abound that 
extortion fees have become the norm, and 
that Thais are giviog refugees little opportu- 
nity to prove their bona tides. 

Tire iVnnwriiate need is for U.S. Embassy 
nffiriaU in Bangkok and United Natrons 
officials to assure protection for the remain- 
ing refugees. The longer-term need is to 
reaffirm the American commitment. The 
Thais have seen, the number resettled in the 
United States decline steadily. If America 
would commit itself lo sustaining the cur- 
rent level of around 30,000 Indochinese 
refugees for several years. Thailand would 
be assured that it would not be left to 
manage this problem alone. 

In return, Thailand needs to maintain 
adequate first asylum. With continued in- 
ternational support, it must ensure orderly 
entry procedures, adequate protection and 
decent living conditions. For Thai and U.S. 
officials, this is a matter that has run cm 
exasperatmgly long, long enough so that 
they may forget something crucial: For the 
refugees, it remains a matter of life or death. 

— THE NEW YORK TIMES. 


Consensus Needs Funding 


The Reagan administration, which began 
its life at the United Nations as a sharp 
critic of the organization, is ending up as a 
booster. The transformation is the result of 
efforts to introduce internal reforms. These 
justify and require, the administration now 
says, a restoration of the U.S. financial 
support that was withheld while the United 
Nations was still in its retrogressive “politi- 
cized” phase. Yet difficult hurdles remain. 

The first is a certain lingering skepti- 
cism on the American right, but not only 
there, about the worth and permanence of 
UN reform. The key UH demand was to 
give donors, of which Washington has al- 
ways bees the largest, a measure of control 
more commensurate with their dues. This 
was done by gaining approval for a new 
requirement for “consensus” on budget lev- 
els and priorities. The administration insists 
to Congress that the new regime will “mea- 
surably increase" donor influence. 

We think it is worth a try. But candor 
compels acknowledgment that the crviHty 
and mutual restraint needed to make consen- 
sus work are not everyday qualities at the 
United Nations. Nor is there a dear Ameri- 
can view, let alone a dear view in the organi- 
zation as a whole, of bow modi powa' Wash- 
ington ought to wield or how much it should 


defer to small states whose reason for being 
there is to have a role in a forms where power 
does not depend cm size alone. 

Then there is the matter of funding. The 
United States got its way in reform not by 
smoothly managing consensus but by pres- 
suring the organization with unilateral fund 
cuts — cuts that went into muscle, not just 
into faL This is what produced such anoma- 
lies as President Reagan's presentation of 
the National Medal of Science to the direc- 
tor of the WHO smallpox eradication pro- 
gram last March, even as the World Health 
Organization was being starved of the 
funds to launch an aggress i v e attack on the 
new epidemic of AIDS. A restoration of 
funding is now essential in order to show 
the gpod-faith commitment to the reform 
that the U.S. government demanded of the 
United Nations' other members. 

But look at what is actually happening to 
the US. budget The administration asks 
Congress to put up money few the United 
Nations and its specialized agencies Cram 
this point onward, but it has no plans to seek 
foods to make up the arrearages that acca-. 
molated in tire period erf bhrigpoaing. This is 
not fair. It is bound to reduoe the incentive of 
other members to make “consensus" work. 

— THE WASHINGTON POST. 


Some presidencies, like Lyndon John- 
son's in Vietnam, failed through tragedies 
loo deep for any individual to avert. Others 
have gone awry through such egregious 
blunders that it seems that an ounce of 
common sense in the president’s ear would 
snrely have saved him. What if presidents 
were to install not just a biographer, as 
President Reagan has done with Edmund 
-Morris, but a designated savior in the White 
House, charged to speak only in the pres- 
ence of what he deemed a historic goof. 

“If you must invade Cuba, don’t try it 
without air cover," the official blunder- 
blocker might have said to John Kennedy. 
To Richard Nixon: “This third-rate burglary 
is going to become an impeachable offense.” 
To Gerald Ford: “Pardoning this felon will 
prove unpardonable.” To Jimmy Carte: 
“For this rescue mission to work, we need a 
miracle." And to Ronald Reagan: “Trading 
anus to the Iranians for hostages is totally 
contrary to your stated policy.” 

Would presidents intent on bold action 
listen to such naysaying? Suppose they were 
encouraged to appoint someone of undoubt- 
ed stature. Imagine this certified eminence 
■ef fin g impassively in the Oval Office, saying 


not a word for month after month. Then, one 
awesome day, he clears his throat. Would 
that not get the chief executive’s attention? 

Presidency af ter presidency has stumbled 
not due to the machinations of enemies but 
due to colossal urisjudgments. “If but one 
of the major policy mistakes we examined 
had bean avoided,” the Tower commission 
repined, “the nation’s history would bear 
one less scar, one less embarrassment, one 
less opportunity for opponents to reverse 
the principles this nation seeks to preserve 
and advance in the world." Even if the 
official mistake-minder’s cautions were ig- 
nored, at least the peal of his helpless laugh- 
ter might stir useful doubts. 

But history, however fixable it may seetn, 
cannot be changed so easily. Think how 
soon the designated savior would acquire 
a staff of his own, and an avid taste for 
being Washington's inside-most insider. He 
would grow to share the president's peeves 
and obsessions. And come the day when tile 
president committed a blunder of cata- 
strophic girth, the official witness, grown as 
oblivious to error as his master, would re- 
quire a savior of his own. 

— THE NEW YORK TIMES. 


INTERNATIONAL herald tribune 

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opinion 


The Debt Burden Is the Heritage of Authoritarian Governments 


S AN FRANCISCO — Mario Vargas 
Llosa, the Penman writer, was talking 
about hopes and problems in Latin America. 
“If we Latin Americans do win the battle for 
freedom, we can say we woo it ourselves — 
against our enemies and despite our friends." 

Mr. Vargas Llosa was addressing a confer- 
ence of the Trilateral Cbmnrisson here, several 
hundred mostly establishment types from Eu- 
rope, Japan and the United States. The subject 
was Third World debt. Because he is a novelist 
and not a pdKtioan. hanker or bureaucrat, be 
felt no need to varnish ugly truths. 

“We and we alone are responsible for our 
future," he said, evoking the centuries of 
absolute power and lawlessness, from pre- 

the presen t,*wWch S e^Wi^ed a tradition of 
violence. But something new is happanng.- 
Democratic governments are emerging in 
most countries of the continent based, as he 
put it, on the will of the “humble, nameless 
men and women, the usually poor, often illit- 
erate people of our countries." 

They have been spurred, he said, by “the 
terrible violence of which they have ban the 
victims. This violence, the result of intolerance, 
fanaticism and dogma, has been practiced both 
by revolutionary terrorists and by -political or 


By flora Lewis 


militar y couuterterrorists, an d has littered our 
continent with the dead, the tortured, the kid- 
napped, the disappeared — and these people in 
their vast majority have been the poor. 

“The ordinary popple have opted for de- 
mocracy in an attempt to find an escape from 
this nightmar e reality of dvfl war, terrorism, 
indiscriminate repression, revolutionary ‘tax- 

Onfy democracy can bring 
theref arms Latin America 
needs to icorfc its way out of 
its histork vicious circle. 


cs,’ blind executions ^ the prolifera tion of 
torture. ... They decided to support that 
system which, intuitively and instinctively, 
they thought would be best able to defend 
human rights, or oppress than least” 

Mr. Vargas Llosa has no illusions about 
how hard it will be for the societies to change 
themselves and their habits. But he is con- 
vinced that lack of democracy is not so ranch 


the result as the cause of underdevelopment. 

Nor is.it a coincidence that when at last 
there is movement, the societies are caught in 
an economic grinder that deprives them of the 
means to meet their peoples' baric needs. 
Some factors are beyond their control, such as 
the fall of commodity prices tar which they 
idy for export earnings. Bat the debt burden 
itself is the heritage of the authoritarian gov- 
ernments that they have just shaken, off. 

Only democracy, Mr. Vargas Llosa be- 
lieves, can bring the rHarms that Latin Amer- 
ica requires to achieve development and so- 
da! justice; to work its way out of its historic 
vicious aide. “Moreover, I am convinced — 
although Fm not sure whether to be happy or 
sad about it — that when a Latin A m e ric a n 
nation chooses democracy, it not only 
chooses freedom and the rule of law but the 
most extreme form of independence as wefi. 

“Tins is because no other type erf gov- 
ernment receives less support from the 
West . . . than those regimes in the Third 
World that try thrive the ideals of freedom 
and pluralism which are the West’s neatest 
•contribution to the worid. I doubt that any 
democratic ^atinn in the underdeveloped 


U.S.-European Dialogue 
Needs a Political Forum 

By Leo Tindemans 

The writer, Belgian minister of external relations and a former prime minister, 
is president of the European Community's Cotatal of Ministers, 

B RUSSELS — Thirty years ago to- thrash out economic problems. This 
day, the European Community's is obviously not enough. 


wfww'fcuR W, [aw/ 

m® 


world has received the credits 
Oita has received from the Sow* Union^ 
“And it is certainly uue that noL™ 
American nation fighting to 
freedom within the law ; ever before 
the militant sympathy that SandinistNi^ra 
gua has inspired m liberal and progressive 
circles in the West.” , ^ 

suggested, for example, that debt service be 

linked to export prices. , ■ 0 lhr 

There arTotha vrays rotog U* 
squeeze; but there is not much chance for a 
democracy to survive ^ tv, 

whatever we can to sre that it woxts, be aslred 

It is a Qm&ahi. mowig 

interest of the United Stales as weH No vehst ^ 

who must use their imagination- can sometnaes 
see mare deariy than men of authority. 

The New York Tones. 




> s? 


D day, the European Community’s 
founding Treaty of Rome was signed 
by six member states that have grown 
to become twelve. They are now cele- 
brating three decades of a corns rit- 
m q u that has thoroughly change d 
thrir presence on the wodd scene. This 
evolution is not yet finished. 

My countryman, PaukHenri Spaak. 
was devoted to European unity. He 
used to say how be was struck by a 
newspaper photograph in 1945 show- 
ing an American and a Soviet soldier 


thrash out economic problems. This 
is obviously not enough- 

Fo&tical tensions are also appear- 
ing. Since the early 1970s, the EC 
states have tried to achieve a common 
stand on international Results 
have at iim» been disappointing. 
SLowty but steadily, though, Europe 
has been speaking more of ten with one 
voice. For example, the 12 recently 
joined in calKng for an international 
conference on Middle Fag peace. 

This evolution is a natural con- 
sequence of mare cooperation, and it 


SREKNBNSlV^ac^ 

TOEUNttNHW&NSWh- 

RtieEWtSSdSFRat 

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SURE.1 


DffBGE LESSi 




shaking han ds gt the Elbe Rher hr c oa es ponds with the broader gr«l< 
Germany. The caption read, “Libera- envisioned at the rime of the Commo- 
tion erf Europe." At the time, Europe- nit/s foundation. The evolution will 
ans with vision realized that more co- be even more evident when the newly 
operation was needed not only to ratified amendments to the Treaty of 
overcome their postwar economic dif- Rome are implemented, 
ficulties but to assert Europe’s voice in The U-S. side has repeatedly object- 

a worid dominated by superpowers. ed that Europeans do not contribute 
The first advocates of postwar Eu- enough to their own defense; But 
ropean integration — Jean Moaaet, when Europeans «™i« an effort to 
Spaak and others — were great friends reflect about their own security, far 
of America and realized how impor- instance in ♦Hefrainewn ri f nf the Wesa- 
ta nt a role it would play in the recow cm European Union, suspicions are 
eiy of Europe. In those days, Europe- aroused in Washington. And Europe- 
an irmly was encouraged by A m e rican ans were alarm ed when they saw bow 
s tatesm en such as Dean Acheson. In casually matters vital to their de fens e 
1962, President Kennedy formulated were dealt with in Reykjavik by the 
the ideal of cooperation between Eu- Americans and the Russians. 


On Second Thought . . . Sr£ 


Germany. The caption read, “libera- 
tion of Europe." At the time, Europe- 
ans with vision realized that more co- 
operation was needed not only to 
overcome their postwar economic dif- 
ficulties but to assert Europe’s voice in 
a world dominated by superpowers. 

The first advocates of postwar Eu- 
ropean integration — Jean Moaaet, 
Spaak and others — were great friends 
of America and realized how impor- 
tant a role it would play in the recov- 
ery of Europe. In those days, Europe- 
an unity was encouraged by American 
statesmen such as Dean Acheson. In 
1962, President Kennedy formulated 
the ideal of cooperation between Eu- 
rope and the United States in the 
slogan, “equal partnership." 

A quarter century later, the ques- 
tion is asked: Can the United Slates 
and the European Community be 
partners and allies while at the same 
time becoming fiercer competitors? It 
is too easy to say that this is some- 
dung that happens among the best of 
friends. We need to have the courage 
to cope with our conflicts. 

The European Community has in- 
creasingly become a cohesive eco- 
nomic unit, with its own interests, 
preferences and trade policy. It also 
has the basis of a common currency. 

Recently, economic relations with 
the United States have become more 
strained, with a major trade crisis car- 
tying the menace of a vicious circle of 
retaliation. Trie United Stales and the 
European C o mmun i ty are fi ghting 
more frequently over outlets for their 
excess com and wheat Complaints are 
heard about protectionism, currency 
manipulations and budget deficits. 
Most accusations arc not groundless. 

Trie United States and the 12 Euro- 
pean Community states share some 
institutkmafaed channels for commu- 
nication: They are members of GATT 
and the OECD; and each year, four 
European nations meet with Japan, 
the United States and Canada to 






Isn’t it surprising that two entities 
striving to defend tb: same fundamen- 
tal values and aware of the need far 
good relations do not look for a more 
regular basis erf consultation for mutu- 
al analysis «nti understanding? 

The United Slates and the Europe- 
an Community states belong to several 

jw Mjmarinngl wi^Htnriwn^ but these, do 

not solve all their problems. 

In the political sphere; high affiaals 
of European foreign m inis tries and the 


State Deportment wiR meet occasion-, dialogue coaid define remedies and 
ally as a result erf a recent initiative, prevent hurtful accusations. It would 
Bat what about dotted nffidak with lead to a better tmdostandingtrf each 
(fired political responsibility? fit the other’s perspectives and problems, 
framework of European political co- Thirty years after the signing of 

operation, the 12 regularly meet at Treaty of Borne, it is time that a i 
minis terial level with representatives gnomon of leaders get to know ( 
of Japan, China, the Avocation of another bjMneaaitt the kind af d 


Borne, it is time that a new 
t of leaders get to know one 
y renewing the kind of dose 


Southeast Asian Nations and tfaeGulf contacts that can lead to better co- 
states . Simflar do not take • operation and understanding in Enxo- 


pLjce with the United Stales. 

This type of regular; streamlined 


pean-Amcridm relations, . 
International Herald Tribune. 


Why American Forces Shonld Remain in Europe 


W ASHINGTON —For years the 
idea that the United States 
should withdraw its troops from Eu- 
rope has been a favorite hobbyhorse 
of the American left- Now the pro- 
posal is picking up support from con- 
servatives. It remains a bad idea. 

Some, such as Henry Kissinger, 
have spoken in general terms about 
reducing U.S. forces in Europe as 
part of a broader plan to reform 
NATO. Others, such as Zbigniew 
Bizezinslti, have been more specific, 
urging that 100,000 troops be 
brought home. Still others, such as 
Melvin Krauss, a neoconservative 
economist and the author of “How ' 
NATO Weakens the West” advocate 
a total U.S. pullout from Europe and 
the abandonment of NATO. 

They are wrong. Maintaining a 
free, independent and democratic 
Western Europe remains the pre-emi- 
nent strategic interest of the United 
States. In global terms, the loss of 
Western Europe would be as signifi- 
cant as the Chinese-Soviet split — 
with America on the losing end. 
Recognizing this, two generations 


By Richard Burt 

The writer is US. ambassador lo West Germany. 


of Americans and Europeans have 
established and refined a security sys- 
tem based on the engagement of U.S. 
power in Europe — both a nodear 
guarantee and a substantial combat 
presence. This security system, with 
its two important American de- 
ments, has succeeded beyond all ex- 
pectations. For 40 years, Western Eu- 
rope has remained stable and free. 

The case for a US. withdrawal 
rests on three principal fallacies: 

• It would save money. Melvin 
Krauss argues that the U.S. commit- 
ment co NATO costs more than 5130 
trillion a year and suggests that the 
money could be saved simply bypoD- 
ing out of Europe. But these savings 
would not be realized if forces with- 
drawn from Europe were moved to 
the United States or elsewhere. Sever- 
al recent studies indicate that rede- 
ployment would probably cost more 
than (he status quo. In West Germa- 
ny, for example, US. forces use more 
than 2,000 rent-fine installations. 


If the withdrawn farces are to be not be, 
demobilized once they return home, ty con 
we should frankly recognize such a- with a 
ductions far what they are: a menu- Coni 
menial step toward unilateral dis- the Em 
armament. This would leave the of-NA' 
United Slates an army of half a m3- Europe 
lion men, turning it from a supopow- thc'Tan 
cr into a military and political dwarf, naval ft 
• Europe is of declining strat^ic farces i 
importance. Zbigniew Brzezinski has The ! 
noted the military problems America banced 
facesdsewherein the world, especial- happen 
ly in the Gulf and Southwest Asia, of the 1 
where energy concerns and religious rope. T 


the' U.S. mflaary presence is irre- 
placeable at present. They have made 
dear, for example; that they would 
not be able to replace the UA securi- 
ty commitment to West GeassMry 
with a guarantee oftheir own. T 
Contrary to widespread belief, 
the Eu rop eans now provide the bulk 
of NATO forces for the defease of 
Europe. They provide 90 percent of 
the Tand forces, 75 percent of the 
naval forces and 50 percent erf the air 
forces in Western Europe. • 

The strongest supported of an en- 
hanced European defense effort also 


of the U.S. mDitaiy presence in Eu- 
rope. They understand that a U.S. 


It Wasn’t Unique, for AU Its Horrors 


fundamentalism continue to threaten withdrawal would strengthen thosein 
Western interests. He argues that a Europe who favor unilateral disarma- 
cutback in Europe would make it menl as a way erf seeking an accom- 
easer to react to contingencies else- modation with Moscow. So VS 
where, notably in Central America, withdrawals would demoralize the 
But for the Soviets, the countries of very people who are working for a 
Western Europe remain the biggest stronger European defense identity, 
pore. Of aD Soviet forces, the most Therealthr^ to tl» affiance is the 
numerous, the most capable, and the unh e alt hy symbiosis that is engaging 
best trained are arrayed against between leftist critics of the affiance in 
Western Europe. Soviet conventional Europe and critics on the right in the 
and nuclear forces thre a tening Eu- United States. A perverse muror-im- 
rcpe have been getting stronger. age phenomenon may come about 


**5 ^ By William Pfaff 

Inhn TVmmviiitV Tcra#l «mprr_ » 


1 John Demjaxyuk Israel eoeperi- 
cnees a cathartic recounting of the 
Jewish experience at TrebHnka, a 
controversy has been going on con- 
cerning Poland’s prewar treatment 
of Jews and an alleged Polish com- 
plicity in Hitler's ‘ffinal solution." 

That anti-Semitism was an im- 
portant phenomenon is prewar Po- 
land is beyond dispute. Some argue 
that the principal Nazi death camps 
were located in Poland because the 
Poles could be counted on lo acqui- 
esce m the workings of the canms or 
even lo collaborate with the Nazis, 

The Poles themselves made up 
what was almost certainly toe sec- 
ond largest group of those put to 
death in Nazi extermination camps. 
The Nazis held Poles to be an infe- 
rior people whose role in a Nazi 
Europe was to be that of laborer or 
servant Some three mfflioii Poles 
were killed, including about half of 
all those in possession of a higher 
education. The program was to 
efimmaie die intelligentsia and the 
leadership class so as to block any 
national resurgence erf the Poles. 

Jews and Poles were not, of 
course, the only victims of toe Nazi 
racial purge. About four and a half 
mini on other Slavs and some 50,000 
Gypsies were (tilled, as well as a 
considerable number of Germans 
who were insane or disabled. 

The question erf Polish guilt in 
toe extermination of the Jews was 

the subject of toe film “Shoah," by 

the French director Oaude Laaz- 
mann, which has been shown wide- 
ly in Europe and North America. 
The case he makes against the Poles 
has been contested as a distorted 
picture of the reality, but it has also 
led w a challgngft to the Polish 
conscience from within Poland. 


Lq January and February, toe 
Roman Catholic journal Tygodnik 
Powszechny published three arti- 
cles on Polish anti-Semitism — on 
the prewar situation, on “Shoah," 
and on a third case erf Polish- Jewish 
controversy, a recent project (now 
abandoned) by Polish Roman 
CalhoBcs to install a convent of the 
contemplative Carmelite order at 
Auschwitz. The project was seen by 
many Jews as an unwelcome Chris- 
tian intrution into a place of great 
symbolic pyxing to modem Jews. 

These articles and their authors 
were attacked as “anti-Polish.” One 
critic, a lawyer, offered the dd ratio- 
nales of anti-Semitism, saying there 
was hostility toward the Jews be- 
cause they had, before the war, dom- 
inated trade and takes more than 
their share of places in the schools 
nrvl uni v e r siti es. He said they couid 
not really be helped during the war 
because of their “passivity." 

This provoked furious protests. 
The controversy goes on today, and 

not tally in Poland. The master has 
been debated at conferences at Ox- 
ford and in the United States, and 
in The New Yak Review of Books, 
the magazine Commentary, and 
elsewhere in the press. An eminent 
British Historian, No rman Davies, 
has daimed in a lawsuit that be was 
denied an appointment at Stanford 
University in California because 
Jewish faculty members considered 
his work insensitive toward toe 
Jews and unacceptably defensive of 
Polish g en tile s in World War II. 

There is something inexpressibly 
sad in witnessing these two peoples, 
who suffered so much from the Na- 
zis, at odds with one another in this 


way, so that even acts meant as 
atonement serve as provocations. 

In the midst of the co ntr o ve rsy 
there appeared, m the Jan. 29 issue 
of The New York Review of Books, 
a long letter by an Israeli scholar of 
Polish origins who. as a child, expe- 
rienced the siege of the Warsaw 
Ghetto and two years as a prisoner 
in the Bergen-Bdsen camp. 

One may contest the writer’s ar- 
guments, as many wdL But with 
great nobilily of spirit and moral 
serenity, the author, Israel Shahak, 
nwinMiiw that it is a mistake to 
treat evil, even the evil of the Holo- 
caust, as if it were confined to a 
an gle human group. The Holo- 
caust, he says, was an immense but 
not unique care in history of the 
deliberate massacre of racial and 
political minorities, and thus it par- 
took erf an evil to winch we all are 
vulnerable, as potential partici- 
pants as well as potential victims. 

“The extermination erf toe Jews 
by toe Nazis," be writes, “with all 
its horrors ... was not unique, and 
one can only begin to understand it 
when one sees that it was not 
unique — in two ways. 

“Ficst, by trying to see that the 
majority of human beings really be- 
haved almost all the time in a per- 
fectly typical human way, we may 
perhaps be prepared for other simi- 
lar horrors wtmA may weD come. 

“If we cannot prevent them, 
maybe the true understanding of 
what happened will cause some of 
us not to be merely content with toe 
role of the majority of human be- 
ings (of whatever group) . . . but to 
look higher, and without despising 
this majority, to try in the hour erf 
trial to be better.” 

International Herald Tribune. 

O Las Angeles Tunes Syndicate. 


Western Europe. Soviet conventional Europe and critics an the right in the 
and nuclear forces thre a tening Eu- United States. A perverse muror-hn- 
repe have been getting stranger. age phenomenon may come about 
There are threats in other regions, ~ Americans who call for greater U.S. 
and America must deal with them.' unilateralism win encou rage the frabyj 
But to weaken its capabilities in toe m Europe that favor Appeasement '• ' 
most crucial theater simply to The next few years win be crucial 
strengthen them elsewhere is had for NATO. There is a growing con- 
strategy. Tins would make it mare seams on both sides of toe Atlantic 
likely that conflicts in other regions that tbs defense of Europe requires 

S ad to Europe where, haring with- .an improvement in NATO’s canven- 
wn substantial forces, America tional forces. There is also growina 
wouldbeatatosadvimtage. recognition, demonstrated at Rcvld^ 

• A VS. troop withdrawal would vft,tbat a reduced reliance onmuL 
sttffen European resolve. This argu- ar weapons is derirsMe 
meat displays a fundamental unsun- The United States could soon have 

tierstanding of European realities, an agreement with Mosonw for ~ 
Weston Europehas moved gradually am^toSnate ^UA^idSOTi- 


meni owpiays a nmoamentai unsun- The United States could soon have 

derstandmg of European realities, an agreement with Moscow f«r ~r 
Western Europe has mewed gradually ample, io rfw^r, n »» .nnc 
toward economic and poh&d unity 

onJybecaoMoftheitAbflity jrcovided rcducion fit mto a 

tTOO P presence. of improving conventional 

that they are far from militaiy tnde- and providing a mora - JhL 

gest champions of European inde- would undermine all of 
pendence and drfense an toucany, say 


IN OUR PAGES, 7 b A1NJD 50 YEARS A<jK> 

1912: Persia’s ’Prince 1 1937: Btoduufe 

TEHERAN— Tte reply of Salar-ed- 
Dowlehi brother of toe deoosed 






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INTERNATIONAL HERALD TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 25, 198 



OPINION 




g tetes ? 

<*“1^ mightiest % Anthony Lewis that they would investigate the contra 

Ctfll prosecutor^ mvestisaikm 3 supply operation before turning to the 

w Iran anns sales. The committees made 

wanes one stands out. That wwu^* mat officiate oonspired to defraud the that decision after talks with Mr. Walsh, 
broad charge of consmracv in theam!!w Uiu! «* States if they used their position. There are other relevant statutes: 

of arms to the Nkaraenan resources and time to defeat what was cm penury and obstructionof justice, for 

tin* when theU.S. Congress had hailS thm the law: the Boland amendment example. Also, Section 2778 of Title 22 
of Irfan! military support. oan “ toroid ding official arms supplies. There qmtw it a crir^ punishable by op 

J The imtependcnl counsrf Tn WI -. wouW 00 daibt be evidence of conceal- to two years in prison and a $100,000 
Walsh, i» at too eaSHTstaffirfiSr “eat, as in Watergate; that huHctment fine, to oport anns in violation of 
hwfestigarion for anyone to kiZXw “PS* “deceit, craft, trickery. . the rules. The stature exempts officials 
he wflf find enough evidence af*nrfTt ®°l*nd amendment was not a only if they are carrying out a “sales 

conspiracy to pm it to a grand mrv nwH ^ nnn a d ***• ^ ^ reason gome have pre^ram authorized ty law." 
sect nwfai~». w But tw jumped to the conclusion that there is Looming behind all possible criminal 

0601 no penalty for violating the policy it prosecutions b the question of President 

ABRmn AT noun ro^.^ppoai Cdond North 


: . ABROAD AT HOMF. to defeat th 

k^ !^*** activities that maxunump 
reetn n> fit the relevant criminal statnte. and a fine o 

' .-liSPy* Q^Ofacr North ran a Everythin 
■ co yP^ ete with Swiss KanV ao- . deuce a 

fmnded arms and money to lawyereS* 
s W 5Sedl y pn- woriongon 
dro PP ed weapons to to believe i 
mem made telephone calls to White question of 
3°®*® “umbers, including Colonel One due i 


to defeat die policy could wdl be pun- 
ldied under the conspiracy statute. The 
maximum -penalty is five years in prison 
and a fine of 510,000. 

Everything will depend on the evi- 
dence dug out by Mr. Walsh and the 17 
lawyers and many investigators he has 
wonting on the facts. But there is reason 
to believe he is focusing, first, on the 
question of aid to the contras. 

One clue is that the House and Senate 


v-oiane! ciue is tnax me Mouse and Senate 

s- A eontra leader, Alfonso Robdo committees on the Iran-contra affair, 
ritmnnh 9 , E 01 a month when they reached th«r extraordinary 


■piwwu a roomn 

through the colonel for a year. 

; Tb ? *«e row the money siphoned 


agreement to work together, announced 


Reagan's role. Suppose Colond North 
andRear Admiral John Poindexter are 
given partial immunity and compelled 
to testify. Suppose they say that they 
woe fallowing the president's orders. 
At his press conference last week Mr. 
Reagan with emphasis: “I set the 
policy in ^ administration.” 

At this stage all is speculation, but 
1 think one thing is dear. We have been 
paying too much attention to such pass- 
ing phenomena as press conferences. 
The greater engine for discovering the 
truth is the criminal law. 

The New York Tones. 



Frozen Flakes of Pollution 
Foul an Ancient Wilderness 


'Our legal justification for star wars testing was flawed* 
and mistakes were made. I take full responsibility’ 


~ wauwm>iA 4UQ 

to nave gone as ransom to Lebanese Idd- 
aappess and kickbacks to Iranian offi- 
oab. But whatever went to the contras 
would fit into such a conspiracy rfoay 
v. The relevant statute is the conspiracy 
'-‘flection in the U.S. Code: Section 371 of 
Title 18. It punishes consp i racies to 
commit other specific offenses listed in 
the code. But it goes beyond listed of- 
fenses to punish, more generally, con- 
spiracy “to dftfniiiri the United States.” 
A conspiracy to defraud, under that 
statute; docs not require proof that the 
government suffered any financial loss. 
It need merely involve the misuse of 
_ government resources —personnel, foi 
e xamp le — for ends thm am corrupt 
or that interfere with the proper func- 
tions of government As long ago as 

■ 1910 the Supreme Court wrote: 

“The statute is broad enough in. its 
terms to include any conspiracy far the 
purpose of impairing, obstructing or de- 
' featmg die lawful function of any de- 

■ partment of government.” 

. The Watergate oover-up prosecution 
frelied in part on that conspiracy statute. 
. HR. Haldeman, John Hirtidimim and 
John Mitchell were convicted of con- 
spiracy to defraud die nation “of the 
government’s right” to have officials of 
the Justice Department and the CIA 
“transact them official business honestly 
and impartially, free from corruption.” 
On the contras, it mi ght be argued 


Letters intended for publication 
should be addressed "Letters to the 
Editor” and contain the writer's sig- 
nature, name and full address. Let- 
ters should be brigand are subject to 
editing We comet be responsible fir 
the return of unsolicited manuscripts. 


LETTERS TO THE EDITOR 

It Should Never Be Absurd to Demand Democracy themselves, and even the 

d koiwlv tw Jurina thMie#lvf*« 


In “Poland: America’s Reversal Is lain 
but Welcome” ( March J8), Tad Szuk 
writes: “To expect or demand a U.S.-type 
democracy in Poland anytime soon is 
absurd ” So, it is not absurd to de- 
mand democracy for Uganda or 

Indonesia, but it is absurd to demand it 
for Poland? Why would it be absurd to 
demand it at any time for anybody, and 
why would a person living in democracy 
fed it absurd to demand it for somebody 
else? After aU, the Solidarity movement 
of 1980-1981, and what remains of it 
today, was an almost unanimous dwmawl 
for democracy by the Poles. Was it ab- 
surd? Is it absurd to democracy 

for any Communist country? 

It is, of course, absurd to expect de- 
mocracy to come to these countries soon, 
just as it is absurd to expect that it wiD 
come from above. But Wouldn’t one dis- 
tinguish b etween expectations and de- 
mands? Shouldn’t the Gist be based on 
political analysis and the second on same 
values? Swuld we demand only what we 
are sure to get? Perhaps this is what the 
West is doing, while the Communists 
always demand what they want and not 
just what seems possible. Tins is why we 
are recreating and they are advancing. 

Mr. Szuk: rqoices. One Jozef Czyrek, 
who “is really second in command to 
General Jarnzrfski,” even dined with 
Senator Edward Kennedy in Washing- 
ton. Did they discuss the reasons why 
the senator could not get a visa to travel 
to Poland less than three month* ago? 

Maybe Mr.Qyrek was explaining the 
rules on Americans getting visas to Po- 
land — ayes for the actress Jane Fonda, 


a no for Lane Kirkland, the union lead- 
er. Maybe they discussed the issue of 
political pluralism; Mr. Szuk sees “a 
form” of this envying Poles, who knew 
democracy and political pluralism in the 
18th century, have not lost their taste for 
it. They will not be satisfied with “a 
form” of it. That is what they are de- 
manding, even today, and it is absurd to 
call these demands absurd. 

IRENA LASOTA, 
President, 
Institute for Democracy 
in Eastern Europe. New York. 

People Policy in Singapore 

Regarding the opinion column “Singa- 
pore: Base Three. While Minding the 
Image ** (March 19) by Richard Reeves ; 

Since independence, the Singapore 
government has earnestly and stnam- 
ously sought to build conditions for ra- 
cial harmony. As a member of a minus- 
cule minority group, 1 can state that 
nothing is further from the truth than 
the allegation that the government’s 
population policy seeks “to maintain the 
overwhelming Chinese majority." 

The demographic trends that have led 
to this new policy are not secret Among 
the racial groups, the Chinese have the 
lowest fertility rate — 13 live births per 
woman, compared with 2.1 for Malays, 
1.9 for Indians and 2.4 for other minor- 
ity grams. The level required for zero 
papulation growth is 2.1. In other 
words, the Chinese, and to a lesser ex- 
tent the Indians, are failing to reproduce 


themselves, and even the Malays are 
barely replacing themselves. 

Within every racial group, those fam- 
ilies most able to look after children — 
the better educated, higher-income fam- 
ilies — are having fewer children. The 
problem reaches its most acute among 
women university graduates; large num- 
bers never many, and when they do they 
uniformly under-replace themselves. 
This is true of Malay graduate women. 

The worry is not that the Malays will 
overwhelm the Chinese in numbers; if 
present trends continued, this would not 
happen for centuries. But if present 
trends are not corrected quickly, the 
overall population wQJ start declining 
within a generation. To prevent this, the 
government is encouraging all families 
to have three children, provided they 
can afford to bring them up welL The 
tax incentives to support this policy 
treat all races evenly. Surely Mr. Reeves 
is not suggesting that Singapore should 
follow a policy of two children per Chi- 
nese family, but three per non-Chinese? 

Countries such as Sweden, France 
and West Germany have used incentives 
even more generous than Singapore's to 
encourage couples to have more chil- 
dren. The only difference is that, while 
the shift in reproduction patterns in 
Western Europe has taken a century, 
Singapore's economic and social devel- 
opment has been so rapid that the switch 
from a policy of birth control to a policy 
of birth encouragement has had to be 
made wi thin one generation. 

DAVID MARSHALL, 
Ambassador of Singapore 
to France. Paris. 


Three of Our Own ’ 

In response to “ Many U.S. Catholics 
Say Edict Will Be lgnoretT ( March 13): 

Poor Heidi Plummer of San Francis- 
co, who, lamenting the Vatican docu- 
ment on human reproduction, says of 
her adopted son: “We love Trevor, but 
we warn our own child. Parenting is such 
a strong urge ..." Mrs. Plummer ap- 
parently cannot distinguish between the 
urge to parent and the egotistical urge 
to see oneself reproduced. 

1 hope little Trevor never learns that 
he is a not quite satisfactory substitute 
for the Plummers' “own" child. 

My husband and J have three of our 
own children, all of them adopted and 
none of them less miraculous or less 
precious for not being genetically ours. 

LEE BUENAVENTURA. 

Milan. 

The Vatican and I rarely agree, but 
now, though our premises are diametri- 
cally opposed, we do. My premise is not 
that life is sacred but that our dwelling 
place needs protection, and thus that any- 
thing which makes it easier to bring more 
people onto this dangerously overpopu- 
lated planet should be questioned. I also 
agree that children have, or should have, 
the right to be begotten naturally by 
married parents. They should have the 
right to be raised with love and intelli- 
gence and in health. If we are to work fa: 
civil laws, a good start would be a require- 
ment to license would-be parents and to 
instruct them on child-rearing. 

JEANTURNER- 

Ztuichr 


D ENVER — Water trickled from 
the melting snowpack in the sum- 
mer heat, gathering speed as it flowed 
over the thin mountain soil and past the 

bases of tafl Engehnan spruces before 
spilling into Lake Elbert far below. 

Shimmering in the sun, the 

high valley lake in the Mount Zirkd 
Wilderness Area north of Steamboat 
Springs, Colorado, was filling as it had 

MEANWHILE 

for ages with its annual infusion of 
snowmeil — an event that Lake Elbert’s 
delicate ecosystem depended upon. 

The snowmelt was not as pure as it 
bad been for thousands of years. A com- 
plex set of chemical reactions was taking 
place in the lake. .The crystal waters, 
floating in a natural bowl of granite and 
quartz, mingled with the snowmelt, 
which was subtly contaminated by sul- 
fur dioxide emitted mostly from power 
plants, smelters and factories, and by 
nitrogen oxides emitted mostly from ve- 
hicles and power plants. 

The source of the contamination was 
the snow itself — add snow that had 
fallen throughout the winter and spring 
from clouds fouled by pollutants. 

Add snow — the winter version of 
add rain — is a new specter confronting 
researchers who recently began studying 
it in great detail not only at Lake Elbert 
but at many other sites across the West. 

Much is known about add rain and 
how its mixture of pollutants poisons 
lakes and ecosystems in the Eastern 
United States, Canada and Europe. But 
noi much is known about add snow and 
the -degree to which it could be poison- 
ing pristine wilderness lakes in the West. 

American scientists began investigat- 
ing the problem in 1985 when the Envi- 
ronmental Protection Agency and the 
tig Forest Service the $4 mil- 

lion Western lakes survey. Nearly 800 
lakes were sampled that falL Early results 
carried good news and ugly possibilities. 
The survey has not found significant 


: 


ration. The m«m animal levels of aridity 
in Western rainfall are currently two to 
four times lower than in the East Yet, 
studies in the Eastern United States and 
in Europe have shown that damages 
have occurred in sensitive lakes at levels 
of aridity not much higher than those 
occurring in the Rocky Mountains. 

Perhaps the most sobering discovery 
is that add snow can pack a far more 
powerful first punch than add rain. 

As a snowpack builds, the pollutants 
in layer upon layer of contaminated 
snow filter to the bottom of the pack 
where, within a few months, a substan- 
tial concentration of pollutants accumu- 
lates. Up to 70 percent of the pollutants 
can be released in the first spring melts, 
injecting a pulse of aridity into a lake 
that can jolt the ecological balance. 


Sp 


By David Wann 

kled from Eastern lakes have built-in buffers 
n the sum- against aridity, such as thick bottoms or 
sit flowed mud and high levels of suspended parti- 
ad past the ci** thai act as neutralizers. But Western 
ices before lakes are among the most senstrw in the 
below. world, according to surveys. Thar gnro- 
sr 51 ) r. the ite-and-quartz lake beds cannot neutral- 
urn Zirkd ize adds; lake bed soil levels are thin — 
Steamboat way little soil is washed into mounram 
g as it had lakes — and there are few trees or other 
vegetation to help neutralize the adds. 

The laVrii are virtually helpless in con- 

tending with arid precipitation. The 

illusion, of aridity eventually dissolves, but the 
ke Elbert’s damage caused by |>nfllu>| jolts of sulfu- 
upon. ric acid and nitric add eventually can 
pure as it taV* a high toll on aquatic life, 
irs. A con- Typically, the impact of arid rain is 
was lairing felt in two stages. First, there is a decline 
tal waters, in the arid-neutralizing capacity of sur- 
granite and face waters and soils. Depending on 
snowmelt, variables such as the amount of add 
ted by sul- precipitation, the sensitivity of native 
ram power species, and the structural charactens- 
ss, and by tics of the ecosystems, effects may begin 
ly from ve- to be seen after several years. 

In ihe second stage, there is a decrease 
nation was in the diversity and productivity of 
v flint had aquatic spades. Certain spedes of algae, 
and spring insects, tnoflusks, zooplankton, fish and 
ants. amphibians are sensitive to aridity, and 

version of birds and mammals may consequently 
fron ting suffer a shortage of food or an accumu- 
in studying lation of toxic metals. 

.ake Elbert Most projections indicate that despite 
s the West, the closing of several smelters in the 
d rain and Southwest and a decrease in average 
its poisons emissions per vdncle, total nitrogen ox- 
h; Eastern ide and sulfur dioxide emissions will 
urope. But remain steady through 1995. This is be- 
1 snow and cause of a slight increase in the total 
be poison- number of vehicles and power plants, 
n the West. “The effa^s of arid deposition can be 
investigat- so subtle that we can't determine (he 
n the Envi- severity on the basis of just a few years’ 
y and the worth of data," said Larry Svoboda, 
the $4 mil- regional arid rain coordinator for EPA. 
Nearly 800 “But the consequences — as wdl as the 
iariy results uncertainties — are just too vast to sit 
Kxsibilities. bade and do no thing. ” 
significant EPA officials said last week that new 
ridpredpi- studies showed that 300 lakes in the 
Is of aridity Northeast could be acidified by add 
□tly two to rain in the next 50 years if nothing is 
: East Yet, done, doubling the number of affected 
1 States and lakes in the region. This summer, the 
it damages agency plans to expand its lake testing, 
res at levels It is an unsettling thought while hik- 
thnn those ing the mountains and meadows of the 
n tains. Lake Elbert area to wonder whether 
g discovery those feather-like cirrus douds in the 
a far more bright blue sky could be slowly, subtly 
id rain. broadcasting the seeds ol ruin for the 
i pollutants Mount Zirkel Wilderness. The preserve 
ntaminated has remained essentially unchanged for 
>f the pack thousands of years. Environmental sri- 
asnbstan- ence is committed to keeping it that way. 


The writer works in the office of exter- 
nal affairs at the Environmental Protec- 
tion Agency in Doner. He contributed 
this comment to the Denver PosL 


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Short is it: The view from Ungaro, left, and Valentino. 

The Populist TIemys’ 


By Robert Cushman 

International Herald Tribune 

L ONDON — Shakespeare's his- 
* tones nearly always bring out 
the best is these who do them, 
especially when done in bulk The 
Old Vic is staging “The Hewys” — 
“Henry IV" Parts 1 and 2 and 
“Henry V,” but on Saturdays all is 
one day, morning to evening. 

This kind of marathon is osuaBy 
the prerogative of the Royal Shake- 

THE LONDON STAGE 

speare Company, but “The Hen- 
ry?” are the wok of the English 
Shakespeare Company, a new 
group formed by the director Mi- 
chael Bogdanov and the actor Mi- 
chael Pennington to tour large- 
scale classes. There are a lot of 
-dinner Stratford acton in the com- 
*pany, and their experience and as- 
surance, Bogdanov’s inexhaustible 

DOONESBURY 

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SHBVA! 


WHAT CBRB8RUM, 

PLACE 

* w/s? SSemSS, 



energy, and die richness of the 
plays, are a potent combination. 

Where the ESC differs from the 
RSC is in its aggressive populism. 
The plays are done mainly in mod- 
on dress. The first one begins with 
an instant folk sang, devised to dne 
usmto the pre-history but actually 
mare obscure in its dialect than the 

blank verse it is supposed to eluci- 
date. Has is the kind of thing that 
young peopfe are s u pp os ed to love; 
though Z suspect that it helps and 
flatters the actors more than the 
spectators. An actor asked to day 
ancient Pistol: as Elizabethan 

roaring boy may not know where to 
start. Make him a motorcycling 
punk with a vicious streak, and it’s 
easy. Well, easier. 

Actually, die costuming is eclec- 
tic. Some soldkrs are medieval, 
others contemporary. Henry IV 
and his ministers sport sober Ed- 
wardian frock coats, but Prince 
Hal’s lounging attire is jeans, which 
points up the golf between them. 
Falstaff is a striped-suited saloon- 
bar dandy, but his cronies — who 
outlive him — are 1980s riffraff in a 
recognizably nrodown pub. Gradu- 
ally the contrasts even out; we 
watch the new world taking over 
from the dd. It is aB summed up in 
the fight between Hal and Hotspur 
at Shrewsbury. Hotspur, the relic 
of chivalry, actually lets his oppo- 
nent reclaim his fallen sword; Hal, 
when the luck goes his way, has no 
such scruples and plays the butch- 
er. HedoraTeryoyit,bmaprioce 
has gotta do what a prince has 
gotta do. And eventually what a 
king has gotta da Hal sacrifices 

humani ty to become apolitical and 
military machine. 

The mix is S timula ting, while it is 
a mix. By the time weget to “Hemy 
V" modernity has wholly taken 
over, with the Agincourt campaign 
staged — ingeniously — as if it 
were the Falkiands. it really feels 
like war, but in this atmosphere 
Hal's humanity, and his scruples, 
make no sense, and the play be- 
comes monotonous. Shakespeare 
liked Henry V, Bogdanov doesn’t, 
and Pennington, gallantly speaking 
the lines, is left in the middle. He is 
far more interesting as the earlier 
Hal. caught between two worlds. 

The plays, especially “Henry V " 
are staged to give us Bogdanov’s 
view of Thatcher’s Engl and: du- 
plicity and opportunism at the top, 
violent desperation at the bottom, 
and jingoism all the way through. 
(Nobody can say that Bogdanov 
Sentimentalizes the lower orders; 
Henry’s troops invade France like 
soccer hooligans)- 

The coberenoe of his vision is less 
thou|h than the detail 


^ I ^^unist, as a director has to 
ba eswdaDy with plays as big as 
the characters come 

jolife, and the “Henry IV" plays 

“ uS^ytoy-Bogtoo^ 
happier with haaor than with emo- 


tion; the account of Falstaff s 
death is surprisingly uumoving. 

John Wood vine is a suave, beau- 
tifully phrased Falstaff, who dou- 
bles as the “Henry V" chores, tell- 
ing the story from a TV 
anchorman's swivel chair. His 
fruity tones are amusingly echoed 
by Colm Farrell as his batmen Bar- 
dolph. John Price is a common- 
place Hotspur but a rampageously 
effective Pistol And there are a 
couple of outstanding female per- 
formances from Jennie Stoller, sub- 
tler and suppler than most as Lady 
Percy and Jenny Quayk, whose 
Doll Tearshm sells sex in a fasion- 
aMc leather binding. 

□ 

In PnaadeDo’s “Six Characters 
in Search of an Author” a rehearsal 
is famously interrupted by a va- 
grant sextet whose author left them 
agonizingly unfinished, and who 
want actors to bring them to life. In 
the original, the play being re- 
hearsed is one of Pirandello's own, 
which may explain why the actors 
take ibis science-fiction irruption 
so completely in their stride. In the 
National Theatre’s new produc- 
tion, Nicholas Wright's adaptation 
has them rehearsing “Hamlet,” a 
play with its own pertinent remarks 
about acting and believing. 

Otherwise, Michael Rodman's 
production is faithful; there is no 
attempt to pretend that we are any- 
where bat in the Italian theater of 
the 19Ms. We begin with some wit- 
ty vignettes of actors arriving for 
work, though the later company 
scenes are strangely stiff. If the ac- 
tors are meant to represe n t surface 
reality, it doesn't help to have than 
sitting around mahmg significant 
remarks at scripted moments. Real 
life, especially real theatrica l life, is 
less organized than that 

But Rudman’s conscientiousness 
pays off with the arguments about 
ulusion and reality, winch have 
never seemed more urgent We fed 
the frustration rif the characters as 
their pristine sense of their own 
identity is swamped by the well- 
meaning mannerisms of the actors. 
We see how swiftly belief can be 
induced by a thoroughly artificial 
stage set assembled from stock. 
There is an uncomfortable acting 
gulf between the old, who are as- 
sured, and the young, who are cal- 
low. 


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ARTS / LEISURE 


Valentino, Ungaro Cut It Beautiful 


By Hebe Dorsey 

Fnimauonal Herald Tribune 

F | AR1S — As the collections 
near their end, the mood in Paris 
is up. Besides good collections from 
Mugler. Montana and Chanel Va- 
lentino and Ungaro gave couture 

PARK FASHION 

designers' ieady-io-wnr a shot in 
the arm. Both of these collections 
came dose to these designers’ lofty 
couture. 

Everybody was smiling after Va- 
lentino's collection, which was tike 
watching “Lifestyles of the Rich 
and Famous." Valentino is a happy 
man who knows who his diems are 
and what they warn He keeps giv- 
ing them unashamedly pretty 
clothes with one purpose in mind 
— to make them more beautiful. 

The silhouette was still pencil- 
slim but it was softer, curvier and 
shorter. Shoulders were strong but 
they softened as the show went on. 
The favorite suit was a short, 
rounded jacket edged with softly 
bristling black fox. ft was pul over 
skinny minis, mini-sarongs or fully 
flared, wide-legged pants. 

Tweeds, giant checks and 
bounds! oolhs were Valentino's fa- 
vorite fabrics when it came to shap- 
ing short, strongly belted coats. De- 
luxe embroidered suede skins, 
started some seasons ago. were also 
very much around, but this time, 
they featured pant suede checks 
over slick black leather. The pan- 
ther theme, a favorite this season, 
was used for just about everything, 
from gloves to turbans and twin 
sets. 

The evening wear was sheer se- 
duction. Dawn MeDo, president of 
Bergdorf Goodman, loved having 
so much to choose from. The pretti- 
est dresses were the short ones, 
which ranged from serious velvet to 
flirtatious white face ruffles, cut 
across by bright satin bows. Al- 
though Valentino showed some 


beautiful long gowns, including a 
couple of satin pannier ed ones, 
both very grand, mere is no ques- 
tion that short is faking over the 
evening scene as well as the day- 
time one. 

Details included white satin rib- 
tons slotted down the sleeve of 
black dresses, black fox hems on 
short black velvet bustier dresses 
and richly embroidered boleros 
over stim black taffeta skins. Big 
fox hats added glamour to this lux- 
urious collection, as did all the gold 
and silver lame outfits. Impeccable 
accessories included high heels, 
sheer hose and very long gloves. 

Ungaro also had an excellent 
collection which included a new 
and welcome sense of humor. He 
built his look on a sharp contrast 
between tight and skinny leather 
minis and powerful jackets — with 
strong shoulders and assertive, leg- 
of-mutton sleeves. Very wide col- 
lars. lined in contrasting fabrics, 
were worn as hoods which softened 
tbe line of the shoulders. Some 


were lined with bright-colored vel- 
vets, others with soft satins. 

Short, belted soils alternated 
with long coats, the latter often 
worn with flat, equestrian boots. 
Although he started with toned 
down colors — wheat, aqua, parma 
— Ungaro quickly reverted to his 

bright palette including turquoise, 
hot pink and red. There was a 
cheery brilliance to his collection 
due to the metallic leather minis 
followed by satins and lames. 

Nowhere was the hourglass, a 
favorite on Paris runways this sea- 
son, as strongly outlined as at Un- 
garo's. Draped dresses, jersey or 
satin, emphasized every curve in 
the body. Tbe prettiest, with a high, 
inverted V bodice and draped hips, 
was worn under a flower-printed 
coa l 

Flower prims were only one of 
the more interesting themes at Un- 
garo's and turned up on peasant 
skirts, peplumed jackets and even 
bloomers. The cydamen-and-green 
peplumed jacket over dasticized 


velvet was the sexiest around. The 
short evening group was a riot and 
included some mad poufs, bustles 
and cancan ruffles. Although there 
was a lot of black, Ungaro also put 
in bright patches such as hot pink 
satin ruffles 2 ! ihe bottom of a 
black velvet bustier. 

Much will be forgiven Ungaro, 
including huge, awkward, oouon 
candy bows, because he produced 
the most beautiful long gowns in 
town. Slim and snaky, they fea- 
tured draped hips and cascades of 
ruffles down the ride. The prettiest 
was of dark brown velvet, a nor- 
mally heavy fabric which Ungaro 
bandied unusually well 

If Jean- Louis Scherrer could 
learn to edit his collections, he 
would be much better oFf. There 
was nothing wrong with his clothes 
except tbe slow, repetitious deliv- 
ery. 

Suits were favorites, with two 
strong themes emerging — both 
inspired from the early days of 
planes and automobiles. Long gray 


flannel coats were touched up with 
black leather at the collars and 
cuffs. Models wore automobile 
caps or black feather helmets with 
goggles. 

Swimming upstream, benerrer 
showed mostly long skirts, includ- 
ing a gray flannel one under a black 
and gray bolero. Other skins, 
equally long, were kuife-pleated 
and worn with boots. 

Pants were ultra-narrow like 
stovepipes and worn under short 
car coats. Evening smoking wear 
with an ambiguous, dandy look in- 
cluded sequin ed jackets and jew- 
eled walking sticks. 

Guy Laroche’s ready-to-wear 
collection is designed by Guy Cou- 
rier, who came down the runway, 
too. This is a vast commercial suc- 
cess and the best-priced of the cou- 
turiers’ ready-to-wear. 

As usual his collection touched 
on all the current favorite themes 
— black leather minis, turtlenecks, 
tartans, quilted jackets, jersey che- 
mises and the ubiquitous poufs. 




■ •. .;vas Kt-G AtT 

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loiuil i act to follow. 


L' l(M}M -*>ClL»nbC - ULNDCJP 'XOtln M t'j x • 14, MOO. C I'-, J -tfaiv 0.1 HI CO «*<, 







l LA ROBE QUE TU PORTES. Ql'E TON CORPS LINVENTE. 


emanuel ungaro 















Page 10 



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NYSE Mixed; Dow Sets Record 

pri«s would W»iJS n “SS 


sue, gaining 14 to 251k- ll introduced new cmft- 

Dow Jones industrial average drove ahead W 
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The Dow, which rose 3°^6 Monday gam^ Quoted takeover bid from PepnCo. 
5.40 to 2J69.18, surpassing the 2363.78 recora Navistar ^ third, falling * to 6%. 


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INavisiar was iuu«, - — - - 

American Express sained wS 

Monday, American Express unoannd la iwj 

jssck?ses 3«~ ^sitssMssati- 

30L64. The price of an average shore gained 1 5^ has been active on takeover 

SP BhSs were mixed. Gene ^oS*^^ 
i4 tn 111 tisx was uo (4 to 2814. Eastman 
Kodak wii up 1% to 78% ami General Mowrs 
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Trade Latimer, of ^tbal & Co. and *£^^^57* 
institutional mvestors looking to ramcetasn - 


° n Bul°d&e S led advances 840-753 amont 
Broad-market indexes broke records soaday 


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Newton Zinder, a market analyst witii RF- 
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Trade Latimer, ot j«*puu»i - — ’ -~r /^foes lost % to . . 1 _ MC - 

institutional investors lookrng to “**£*“5 market watchers have said weaknes m 

reserves by the end of the quarter lh e^«it rally is belied by tbe Mure of the 

for blue chips Hgb. This is the transportation component of the Dow average 

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boflding, are promotion or team 

nifr stereotvoe nmnb. ■»>_ < ® t *Y' Cntics argue that such tests 
** ^ ** such^ectiveSo^ 

afclKxigii co^e^d^y J L candldate for a Job w a promotion, 

**“* V s * ** “**> sucb as the Uml- 
, COD « lo a*=ntte BSN, Lufthansa AG, 

^-.argne that they help the ~ ITT 

conqw ny.adect a person who A new U.S. test 

wul fit m well ax the entry 

level; orient a middle manager measures a person’s 

rrSr^ j “ b ^ persistence in the 

face of advert, 

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gewdidea <rf what they are looking for but they also worry about 

NF^^NEI STM ^ ayk S i s***™ PW*o*St with 

..-Jtf a'^cR-NElSON Publirfung C3o^ the largest British publisher of 

^ .p^*ologit^ tests. ^ ecmqjany also shows persomwl directors 

^wto use the jests. “We wan* companies against trying to match 
•people to an ideal industry profile; that is dangerous. We advise 
them instead to devise their own internal profile of the type of 
m a nager they are looking for.” ,pc 

-_P» two most commonly used tests in the United States, 
.^tam, France and West Germany are the 16PF tests developed 
by the American psychologist R_B. Cattell and the Myere-Bng© 
Type Indicator test, based on Jungtan theory and developed by 
two Amerwan psychologists after World War IL Both tests have 
bcco translated into French, German *nH I talian 
Intemahonal companies, such as Lufthansa, the West German 
airline, use* the 1 6PF test as part of the selection process for recent 
graduates. The test measures 16 personality characteristics, such 
as whether a you n g manag er is outgoing or reserved, suspicious or 

.trusting, happy-go-lucky or serious. 

N FER-NELSON estimates tha t30, 000 Britons, 80 percent 
of them managers, took the 16PF last year, up 30 percent 
from 1983. Although West German, Swiss «nd Austrian 
> \ "*_) _ companies have started to use personality tests, they have been 
more cautious. Veriag Hans Huber introduced 36PF in Bern in 
1983. But sales of the tests have remained constant over the past 
three years. The company will not disclose the size of the market 
In 1984, SaviDe & Holdsworth T .td , the British psychological 
" assessment and publishing firm, introduced the Occupational 

t Personality Questionnaire, which measures 30 personality char- 
acteristics and Wnirs specific occupations to personality. To data, 
200 British companies such as ICI, BP and National Westminster 
’ Bank are using the test, as are Hongkong St Shanghai Bank and 

the Australian airlme Quantas. 

But the biggest increase in the corporate use of personality 
testing has been in the use of the Myms-Briggs Type Indicator. 
Exxon and GE use the test f dr teambuilding, career development 
! and internal promotion. ’ 

“The point of this test is t o feed back the information to the 
person,” said Mrs. Taylor of NFER-NELSON. “Then everybody 
in the team discusses each others* profiles. A tremendous amount 
of trust is needed for it to wadci” * . _ 

. . ■ d the Utmed Stkes, 15 nSlStra people took the Myere-Briggs 
. Type Indicator test in 1986, according to the Consulting Psycho- 
logists Press, Corporations accounted few 40 percent of the test 
sales, double the share of 1983: In England, according to NFER- 
NELSON, use of the Myexs-Briggs test also has doubled over the 
last three years. . 

j Another test that is just being introduced oo the U5. market 

V*fi after 10 years of research by ^Martin EJ. Sdigman, a professor of 
> psychology at the University of Pennsylvania, measures a per- 
son’s persistence in the face of adversity. According to its author, 
See TESTS, Page 13 

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Ov 0*7- O ffu r att te team Reuters aodAP. 


Orders 
Rose 6% 
In U.S. 

Durable Goods 
Reversed Decline 


Compiled bv Our Staff From Dupaube 

WASHINGTON — Oidcra for 
durable goods in the United States 
jumped 6 percent in February, the 
biggest increase in five months, the 
Commerce Department said Tues- 
day. 

The increase in these goods — 
such as automobiles and home ap- 
pliances expected to last at least 
three years — was driven by pur- 
chases of transportation equip- 
ment, electrical machinery and pri- 
mary metals. The rise followed a 
record 9.9 percent drop in January 
and was the biggest advance since a 
7.6 percent increase in September. 
The January fall had earlier been 
reported at 7 J perc en t. 

Orders to UJS. factories are 
closely watched for si gnals on pro- 
duction and employment. The big 
February rise was likely to boost 
optimism that manufacturi ng em- 
ployment will contribute to overall 
economic growth in coming 
months. 

“There is still some life left in our 
aging recovery,” said John Alber- 
tine, an economis t at Farley Indus- 
tries in Chicago. 

Orders climbed to a seasonally 
adjusted total of $101.2 billion in 
February compared to the revised 
total of $95.5 billion in January. 

The gain was boosted by a 48.9 
percent jump in orders for defense 
equipment. Even without this in- 
crease, however, demand for civil- 
ian durable goods climbed 3.8 per- 
cent after a 7.7 percent decline in 
January. 

The key category of non-defense 
capital goods showed a 1.6 percent 
decline in February. This category, 
which measures business invest- 
ment, had fallen 8.7 percent in Jan- 
uary. Analysts said the weakness is 
being caused by the new U.S. tax 
law. which removed tax benefits for 
business inves tment. 

The new figures reflect substan- 
tial chang es in earlier figures to 
reflect a “benchmark revision'’ that 
covered the years from 1982 to the 
present. (AT, UPI) 


Bank of China Takes to Capitalism 

But Hong Kong 
Expansion Has 
Risky Footing 


By Nicholas D. Kriscof 

Nov York Times Service 

HONG KONG — As recently 
as eight years ago. the Bank of 
China served merely as a stodgy 
outpost here of the Beijing gov- 
ernment. 

But since China's opening to 
the West in 1979, the bank’s 
growth has been extraordinary. 
According to its statements, de- 
posits are 5.8 times higher, loans 
have risen 8.5 times and revenue 
is up twelvefold. The Bank of 
China group has taken to capi- 
talist-style competition so well, 
in fact, that it has become the 
colony's second-biggest bank af- 
ter the giant Hongkong & Shang- 
hai Banking Carp. 

The Bank of China seems to 
think this is just a start. It is 
building a 70-story headquarters 
that will be Hong Kong's tallest 
building, with executive offices 
looking down on Hongkong and 
Shanghai Banking Corp. head- 
quartos. 

“It’s extremely comped live, 
both in terms of service and in 
terms of interest rates," said Da- 
vid K.P. Li, chief executive of the 
Bank of East Asia Ltd., another 
Hong Kong finanriwl group that 
has been expanding. “It’s very 
dynamic.” 

For some Hong Kong busi- 
nessmen, deeply apprehensive 
about what will happen after the 
colony reverts to Chmese control 
in 1997, having the Bank of Chi- 
na as a competitor may be 
strangely reassuring. It provides 
evidence of Beijing’s willingness 
to tolerate capitalistic practices 
and of its expanding financial 
stake in Hong Kong's well-being. 
In (be process, China has been 
gaining financial experience and 
raising funds for investment on 

the mainland 

This growing presence in 
Hong Kong has not been pain- 
less, however. The Bank of China 
group seems to be sacrificing 
proms to gain market share, and 
diplomats and other bankers 
have doubts about the quality of 
its loan portfolio. It is aha taking 
some significant risks as it deveF 
ops its expensive new headquar- 
ters in the face of an extremely 


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Shearson Share 
Sale Approved to 
Nippon, Public 1 



The Bank of China's present headquarters in Hong Kong. 


uncertain property market, and 
as it makes very long mortgage 
loans that ImH to a mismatch 
between short-term deposits and 
Longrterm loans. There are, too, 
signs that the Rank of China 
group will face increasing com- 
petition, in Hong Kong as well as 
China, from other government- 
owned financial institutions. 

The Bank of China remains se- 
cretive; and refused to make its 
two top executives in Hong Kong 
available for interviews. One oth- 
er senior executive did grant an 
interview, after three months of 
prodding, but his information 
was limited. Hie could not say, for 
example, when the chief executive 
in Hong Kong, Huang Diyan, 
took the post; how old Mr. Huang 
was; whanc he lived, or whether be 
had a car at his disposal- Other 
information was gathered from 
interviews with competitors, fi- 
nancial analysts »nd diplomats 


and from analysis of the Honied 
financial records the bank pro- 
vides. 

The Bank of China, which is 
based in Beijing, heads a group of 
12 other Chinese banks and one 
finance company operating in 
Hong Kong and the nearby Por- 
tuguese enclave of Macao. The 
aster banks operate exclnavdy in 
Hong Kong, although eight are 
lechmcaQy registered in Beijing, 
They remain under the control of 
the Bank of Qwia though they 
have separate boards at directors 
and distinct specialties. 

This Bank of China missed the 
profits made by Hong Kong 
banks in the late 1970s, when the 
economy was booming and land 
prices were soaring. So the aster 
banks tried to catch up after Chi- 
na's dramatic policy shift of 1979, 
rushing into property lending 
without waiting to develop their 
See CHINA. Page 15 


By James SccmgoJd 

New York Tima Service 

NEW YORK — The board of 
American Express Co. approved 
Monday the sue of 40 percent of its 
Shearson Lehman Brothers broker- 
age subsidiary, giving both compa- 
nies a significant international 

American Express said that it 
would sell 13 percent of Shearson 
to Nippon Life Insurance Co. for 
$338 milli on and that it would sell 
27 percent through an initial public 
offering end to its employees. 

Shearson is counting on the com- 
bination to give it significant access 
to the huge, but hard to crack, Jap- 
anese corporate market, as well as 
more than $700 million in capital. 
That would make Shearson the 
largest securities company in the 
United States, leapfrogging it over 
the traditional leader, Merrill 
Lynch & Co„ and Salomon Broth- 
ers. Shearson, currently No. 3, has 
$2.8 billion in capital 

Nippon Life is by far Japan's 
largest insurance company, with 
$9052 billion in assets, and is the 
largest shareholder of securities in 
Japan, with a stake in more than 
two-thirds of the 1.700 companies 
listed on the Tokyo Exchange. 

The companies said that, in addi- 
tion to gaining two seals on Shear- 
son's board, Nippon Life would 
place an adviser on the 19-member 
board of American Express, giving 
Nippon Life knowledge of and the 
ability to influence the strategic di- 
rection of one of the largest U.S. 
financial conglomerates. 

A number of senior Wall Street 
executives described the transac- 
tion as an important step both for 
Shearson and the U.S securities 
industry, increasing the drive to 
bufld imemationallY. 

Shearson will become the second 
major brokerage house to sell a 
large stake to a Japanese concern, 
following Goldman, Sachs St Co.’s 
sale of a 125 percent interest to 
Sumitomo Bank Ltd. last year. 

There was also concern that the 
Japanese might have begun a pro- 
cess of slowly dominating Wall 
Street through such investments in 
major brokerage houses, similar to 
the way they have taken control of 
pockets of the electronics industry. 


Max G Cha pman Jr„ president of 
Kidder, Peabody & Co„ said the 
link with Nippon Life was far more 
important than the sale of mor£ 

shares to the public because of the 
potential access the deal would give 
Shearson to the Japanese mariceL 
“This gives them more: capital and 
insight mtp the Japanese market,” 
he said. “But don’t forget that it goes 
both ways. This gives them a hand in 
getting into this marker, too" 

The companies also agreed to 
exchange personnel which several 
analysts said could prove impor- 
tant to Nippon life’s growing un- 
derstanding of how the U.S. and 
international capital markets work. 

Shearson and Nippon Life also 
will form a venture in London that 
will engage in the investment advi- 
See SHEARSON, Page 13 


Nakasone Orders 
Efforts to Cohn 
U.S. on Chips 

Ream 

TOKYO — Prime Minister 
Yasuhiro Nakasone intervened 
Tuesday to resolve Japan's dis- 
pute with the United States 
over trade in computer chips, 
government officials said. i 

Mr. Nakasone told Trade 
and Industry Minister Hajime . 
Ta mur a at a cabinet meeting to 
double his efforts to calm UK 
anger at what Washington sees 1 
as Japan's unfair trade practices 
in semiconductors. 

Mr. Nakasone's intervention 
came only two days before a 
scheduled meeting of the Rea- 
gan administration's Economic 
Policy Council to consider 
whether Japan has broken a 
pact on microchips. 

That pad, signed last year 
after months of negotiations, 
calls on Japan to stop “dump- 
ing" chips, or selling them at 
cut-rate prices in world mar- 
kets, and to increase its imports 
of UJS. chips. 


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Republic is firmly committed banking clients with the protec- 
to such sound, traditional banking tion of the stringent banking laws 
practices v-^as diversification of that country, and experienced 

account officers 


who speak your 


language. 


For Republic National Bank of 
New York, the relentless pursuit 
of excellence has achieved 
nothing less than excellent 
results. 

Republic has grown to be the 
11th largest bank in the United 

States, in terms of 
shareholders' 







mdatmonmtma- 

4,0 

Source: Merrill Lynau TeieroM. 


It is active in 19 countries 
around the world, including the 
important banking centers of 
London, Luxembouig, Milan, 
Paris, Hong Kong. Singapore, 
Montreal, Tokyo, and of course, 
New York. 

The dedica- 
tion to excellen- 
ce of Republic 
National Bank 
is a natural 


and the maintenance of a strong 
capital base. 

The bank has always been 
highly selective in lending. It 
emphasizes very conservative 
activities, investing in safe 
and liquid assets and 
using its extensive exper- 
tise to trade profitably 
in precious metals, fo- 
reign exchange, bonds 
and bank notes. 
Underlying every 
aspect of Republic 
National Bank’s 
pursuit of excellence is 
a single, fundamental 
principle: the protection of 
depositors’ funds. 

It should come as no surprise, 
then, that this pursuit of ex- 
cellence results in considerable 
advantages to private bank- 
ing clients, and- the 
application of the very 
highest standards of ex- 
cellence to the handling of 


And Republic’s expertise in- 
ternationally allows you to take 
advantage of opportunities to 
better manage your investments 
on a global scale. 

The pursuit of excellence is 
our commitment. If that is 
something you expea of your 
bank, call us today at our 
Luxembouig office (352)470711. 


Republic 
National Bank 
ofNewYork 

A Safra Bank 



NEW YORK • MIAMI LOS ANGELES MONTREAL 
LONDON PARIS ■ LUXEMBOURG MONTE-CAM p 
MILAN GILBRALTAR GUERNSEY ■ HONG KONG 
SINGAPORE TOKYO PANAMA ■ NASSAU ■ BUENOS 
AIRES SANTIAGO MONTEVIDEO CARACAS -MEXICO 
CITY - PUNTA DEL ESTE ■ RIO DE JANEIRO SAG PAULO 


Figures as at December 3l 1986: 
TOTAL ASSETS: 


US $ 168 billion 
SHAREHOLDERS’ EQUITY: 


US $ 1.6 billion 

















ani-mnwi t -Tail w— »;* 



1***1 


Page 12 


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P^r^oS^i"*.™ upwa® 

HEATING OIL (NYME) 

42 ^ 0090 + cmttaperaal __ <970 M3g +]JJ 

5100 3250 Apr nw 48*0 50.1G +1-74 

TUO 309° NAV 493? 

SL2» 30JS Jun <M5 47^) 4885 +T85 

S3 S3 & If S SS B 33 

S3 SS B S 3 SS «S 

25 tSs^u^" 

SawDov Open l«L4MM uFi» 

CRUDE OlHHYNUEl. . 

,^^,-^^PCj^. lg *g 

Its B JST B-gg B t» 

ii 1 g ffi B 1 B s 






I I I lil'B'3 


18.15 

1885 

Eat Sales 


,4y ° pS?.SalK3 


^Say Open lnt.l4BJTI oft 


ili. 40V StOpShP 1.10 I.* 21 «• 

Sit! IS 180 M « 5“ 

5 2»vlStorT ' 48 


82 —U* 

57V -1 A 


44V WISCPS MO 48 12 76 » 45V— V 

3 l£2!!!£3y 112 24 ‘ v» IS* SS ,«i- a 


935 4V 4V» 
S 24 MV* 


473* 31V VWtCOl 1-12 14 ■■ 

12V 8 V* WOhjrW 

S1V 35V WhflhS 1.12 U 14 


’Eii iPJPffia a 


A sJvS&iS U M g *S 5 Ja SS SSa=5 

ws *«& .» «B 4ffiCiE=a 


as a- .» » 

»V 34W PorGPj *j 8 til 

35’ l * 39V PotGnl 48° 145 


r 3v«£ urg 1 ? | g S£ i&i* g SEt a a*» 

Mass» igiMr; 


O 27A 2, 2?- » 

i!!SiS|u 

& 585 515S.S?v 


23m] i5v Strut Ml 2^eiat 10 ™ 

U 22V SlrtdRt 88 25 16 5 || toV V V Tov* + A 

,1V * J tt S l S , 5« is. 3 " lS 78 76V* 76V + V» 

S 3»&3Mj?j "5 iS^iS^iS^" 

107 9?^ ? un ^L‘if ® 500 9V 9V 9V 

B Ktsir.. Se!Pfe=3 


r &£&; u. « . | !g « ^S- 

4 m SK1K •» 1 ■ 32 iw 17V 17V 17W , 

Sv VtaJS?^ 3 H 3 3 »• ** ^- 1 * 


l 76V4 B *Xw Sot M0 M 28 4896 74V 7^* M Mg 
S ^ A 79 Sv a»v 2SV + A 


PHILADELPHIA EXCHANGE 
OP«}”* lnn “E? Cull*— Last 

Oo^tytiw^re^ ^ ^ jan 

jo^oeVnstraUao Donat»«en«s per upIL 
ADoiir K ii r r 

83 g “f J f 

™ S i W oj? 

id,| 70 r r iw. 

, 12^10 British PouDd*<ant* per unlt 
□ Dnrmfl 150 T r ,UT “ 


HXDQ 4,050 41350 +1* 

%% ss or as -ss -aw 4*^ ^ 


stock indexes: 


^ f « SS3 +^S 

s«J? SS Sao 07-10 «80 


^’SSSSBSSg,® 

Fsas&vfjSg 

?»• rS SUSS: M 3837 m* M 


®h." 

2SV + A 
22Vi + A 


28V 21A XTRA 


20V 13V* Yortlnn 


24 213 21A 20A 21 'A + V 


84V 50V Syntax 
39 24A Sysco s 


408 15V 34V 35 


1*, l'.» PruRIC 
BV 6'* PruRI 


risfemK'lsii 


7V 7A 7A — A 
!1A 21 21 A + A 


21A + "* 
16V + A 


ly* 8 A PSlnpfC l.M 86 

108 68 PS'hP ,G JS !$ 

114V 72 PSIn ptH 8.94 9.1 
liv 7V PSvNH 
73^4 17 PSNH pt 
2SA 17 PNHplB 
33 «. 24 PN H PtC 
31V 22 PNHplE 
27V 18A PNH ptF 


9MI 12V 12A 17** + A 
Soz 12A 12A J7A— A 
50z 97 97 97 - A 

300* 98V 98V 9g*— A 


10 ?A TCWtl 
53V 38V TDK 
54** 38V TECO 
l3 6ATG1F 


AM, 1J 16 
252 M ,13 


B30 9V 9A 9V 
1 44V 44A 44A— V 
1178 44V 44A 4fl* 

54 9A 9 9A 


6 2A ZOPOta 
43V 20V Zayres 
MV ?V temex 
29V iJAZenlthE 
IBA B Zen Lbs 
21 13V Zero 

51 W] 3ZV Zumln 
10V BV Zwrlan 




161 14 IDO U®M 

50800 Caaadlanl DoOprs+Wts «r “"t 

cq-K a t r 


849 25 24A 24V— A 

12 S 1 11 A 11A 11 V- v 
M 2 15 K te S* 9 v 


1J2 26 20 180 51 


l 50 5W4- 

91* *V 9V 




r*+J 


28V 1 *’* PNH ptG * jyy, 37 s*— V 

39A 30A PSwNM 2.W 75 11 2^ » ^ _ * 

41V 25“ EIpIPdI ES 76 U S«V ,«v ,69V 


72 57 PSEGpl 558 76 

IM 88 PSEGpt 8.14 |2 
91 U 74 PSEGpt *60 75 
101 V 84 c, PSEGpl -60 7.9 
99S* 81V PSEGPt 752 7.. 
3V 2V Public*. . 

24V 16V Puebta 60 .' 

30V 10V PR Cem lOe J 

25A 19V PupetP 1-4 8-» 

10V 4V Pullrnn .1! 16 

24 10A PulteHm .12 .7 

15 Purolal 
S 5 Pvro 


X, 5 13 
lOe J 9 
1-6 85 12 
.12 M 21 


toSiK® 

S00Z89A 89A 89A 
10300* 98V 98V 98V— _ A 

4310* 97V 97V 97V +1JJ „ 

279 3A253A + A J2V 35V Tmpl wl 5*M 48» 49V +1 A Carter Hay 

,58 23A 22V TS£~Z *L 50V] 15V* TeretOT 104 6.1 *3 toav 102V 10ZV — A Chrysler 8 

72 2W 2BV 29A + V Uff ]Q | TeiKPT 1160 IM m IDO 99 99A Cotiim Gas 

3332 20V 20V 2OT* + A 99V5 B8V Tenepr 760 76 Svj 2SA— A CurtteWr 

452 .!£ *SS tS* + S ™ «A 12A IM + A DunBrod 

»gsjss T f s «®8s,«4SBaa 

245 AV 6 6V + V J, 28V Tex«» 360 8J 1212TO , 3 ^ 13 V + A GtNorNek 

25V* 17A TxABc -101 “ aoS 30V 30V + A HrweriCor 

■ 71 16A TaxCm -?* “60 iwv 36V— V f+nalnt 23 


'Sfc T asra a » T 2 g“ r ^ 

S ss ^ Si J ™ 

55V 30 VI Tandy J51 3 gl33n !7A 179* + A 

20V 15 TndVCtt M -nS jnv* 39V 39A — V 

43V 27A Tefctrn s 60 13 22 2V 2A 2A— A 

3V IV Tetoom . - .. 111 33544 333V 33416 + A 

360V 291 TeWvn u**> J-2 I* «5 34A 36A— A 

,40V 17V Te^mta 68 u f, ^ Wl + J 


MYSE Hijdis-Ltnis 


NEW HIGHS 153 


101 A 52V Telex _ i? 'I6j OJV 82 

83 44V Tempi n J2 9 » 4« ?SS 66 


692 KV 82 82 - V 

5^ ££$&S&+.* 

3 102V 102V 1«A- 1* 
48 IBB 99 99A 

1000 26 25A 25A -7 A 


ANR2l2pt 

Albertsons 

Amoco 

Autooatas 

Babe Cased 
Bril Pet 
CabotCP ■ 
Carter Howl 
Chrysler » 
Cotum Gas 

Curtiss Wrt 


325 12A 12V 12A + A DunBr 
6 24V 24A 24V + V Exxon 


17V It QMS 

SO'* 32 QuakO s -M 1.7 


if 393 16 W* 15V- J 

17 2091 £§V £V 48+ V 


Sv 23A 3«kSd So U 15 gj 

i!a,i vssm i£sss-v « 

12V 12V OstVCn , _K JqS « ilA + A S 
42V 27V Questor 160 42 IB 270? «y? i-iv. 74 

40V 22A OIRetl J2fl .9 


3 i" iiATexCm JB “ » >«J g; gyj 36V — V hS^JOT 

s SA^^iS^ 1 g“ 1 § UI §v+» !sr 
^^awr *s sssSo" - 


30V 30 A — V \ XV1 24A TxPac 


ss PBIfc « “i3 « ?tv % Sm 


3 Texfll" . „ . , ‘fl too! 7,7* 67V 70V +M* 

50 ^ JSSSfR 


J2a .» 16 351 37V 34 


76 55V Trcprtr pf 208 2J 

J1V6 8 Thortc 

28A 15A ThrmES xj 

55*2 37 TbmBet “ f; 


»S=1V 

37B n , HA - A 


iv ^ SWb if «»j &&& + 5 

Ta n sga- i, ss» s«%;+v 


ttv BV P.LC 

£* 21V RTE 38 16 M 3® 38V Wg Jjg = ^ 

• f? f S r "1 sS “a t 1X^5 

ll 4 Romaa n H37 5V 5A 5A 

^ "S, « u,I, ii ■»"»*« 

. iSM'p. '“i % i 

g 4: BC- ” If J 

sfE- 


8* 4V 4V 4V + A 
303 38V 38V 38V — A 
196 9 8A BA— A 


It 6 Ramad 

5A 1 RungrO 
140 6®'. Par cm M 

22A 10V RJomFn .16 
27V. 19 Ravonr 260 


24V ISA Thomln 
21 ,1V TbmMed 60 

24A 12 Thor In S 

30 3 Thtwtr .Sn 12V 12A 12A — V stanleyWl 

13V 3V Tiger In « jgg j9ft 88V BW SuarVahr 

91V 4AM Time 1J» S 'is 37 * 37V. I7V + A Tdxos Iim) 

41 13V Timplx 1# S 4|x 86V BSV 84 A— V TrlbuneCi 

gaA 54A TlmeM 16J 43 5354 53V6 53V— A UnPacCP 

SS 39 Vi Timken 1X0 1-92« ,S n* 7A M4 VBIItl . 

13V IM {" |5 M 63 MA Mli |2- V SSSUT! 

„?gvSvSA + M 

'< S^ia+* SonDtsI n 


Bfi%S 6 EK« 


73 24 23V 23V 

2W 5V ,5V HJ— V* 


Maytag 

MesaRoyl 

MurphyOH 

NatMedEn 

OrlonP let pr 

PHsburys 

Premrlnd 

Raxtiain Cp 

RussBerr 

SvcbCps 

SoeastShs 

StantayWkS 

SuarVaius 

Texas Inst 

TiibuneCo 


ASA 

AlcanAlum 

ArmWins 

AvotanCp 

Bardens 

Brockwaus 

CaiituiMm 

CatMrPw 

OalrelStr 

ComputSrt 

DtamSh Pi 

Edison Brat 

Fed Pap Bd 

GopIiks 

Harper Row 

HomeDewd 

Hou*lnt62S 

Int Paper 

Kellogg 

Lukenslne 

McDonald 8 

MetEdptl 

NCR Cp . . 


Abbott Lobs 
Am Bark* e 

Arvln 

BetaAH 

BritAirwy pp 

BrwnaFer 

CmRLka 

Champ Int 

CloroxCa 

Conroe 

Disney 

EmridHmn 

FleetwEn 

wlGtabMar 

Harsco 

Homestoke 

HydraulCo 

jamesRyrs 

Korea Fd 

MDCAsein 

Melvttta 

Mexlenfd 

NalcoCh 


NtlWStmlnst MICOP I90ct 


,£ 2 12 l oi “? 

3 4 0,5 «s f 

62JM West Gennno MorK»<ents per iJ^H. f „ 17 

0f i*’£* S ,,5 r r r 0.19 W5 

I I « B u ® “ B 

as » *s sa s : “ “ 

as | : ; 

5486 w J5 r r r 

tlmFrnKiFrenrtlW^sce^mll r r 

^jppc^Ym+^oJo^per-.dL „ 

JYen “ 5 J 4« r r r 

SS S f f r r 0.13 0.1 4 

£« « 2.1* r UI U7 UJ r 

67-03 45 ll* ' JtJ, . 848 0-68 

II S ss - s “ ; 1 

f 7 S 70 ^ r r r 

«j8i swim Ftwo<etin per tmu. r 0.19 

SFrcmc « * i , t r n&S 

g rtyn n 

ZTm 47 036 r 1-W r I r 

SS 68 0.13 « OJJ \ r r t 

T^aeanyoL 71 22686 r Call open taL *£gJ** 

TJ-SStiSL &Sj Pot opea Int. 3M63S 

^r^NU boded. e^Komtano^ 

Last Is premium iwirdtase pncei. 

Source: AP. 


0J6 ( care 


mini 

77fl 3D Apr 43640 4®-— TSto +4JM 


SP COMP. INDE X (CMEI 

point* and amts -*4, 30475 30420 

304» »» iSfi® SDo.SuS 30400 

3044,0 • V2J2, rw SS 30630 30570 307 IS 

Sfn ISJb mS mi wS » 30155 


304*0 30440 Mur.^r^e'SSr 

stoles .. «WlS2 , 5fS«S 


399.00 Jun ijqm 4«J|0 44820 +430 

4=snJ AW -M9J» 449-0° *"- ua 4J130 4*30 

gft? Dec 457 4S750 457-50 457.10 +4CI 


r i proytoew Open lnS.M4+78 uoXn* 


102-28 1E4D 
102-9 


r , us, j. BILLS (IMM3 

I ! SI tnilllon- "S^,' lD0 9^- 0134 9440 9433 94J8 — iDI 

O 9497 50-B Jun 94J6 oTw. 9443 — JC 

r | 9492 9C.53 Sep 9463 9465 944 n 9443 ■ — jBl 

r i ^ H §f ^ ?JS H ?S |I 

s ! e ^ e f .r ® - 

r EsL5atas 8.W2 Prev. Sates 7686 

prev. Doy OoenlnL 38607 up 14 

r w YR. TREASURY (CBTl 

: W*tt‘F iS-V SB ig 3 

r Es?SoiM PnS!sg , « Bf 10 

Prev. Dav Open Int. SJ39 up 349 
07 us TREASURY BONDS (CBrn 

M K 8S3. & g M, I# g. ^ 

* ’sss a* ai ^ 9^ jh, =s 

f S:i 2 St> S£ « *« W9 SS =S 

nt S3- ^ 3S &? 7 =1 

a® Wl Kw ^ n» -d 

* E^-^tas Pr^WeslMM 

r S?-?TiS,r«-nlnL22H802 upflfi 


^oSooenlrd. 94JB4 off4M01 . 

VALUE. LIKE CISCET) .- l .- . / ' „• ~" ■.'■'• 

fTB 

NYSE CO W*.. IN DEX tWVFE). . ... 

°fs°"s4 as bu iss 163 ni =s 
ss ss aasaaiis-^ ^ 

PS»SBOT*ti!* ■- 


•BLVf 


sa'-f. -'• 


ConnnodltY indexes 


+- mm 


102-5 43-12 Jun iuu 

101-22 tO-4 A-2 W 

101 -IQ 62-24 D«C 2H1 

100-26 47 MW gf £ 

99-23 66-25 Jun 94-7 w 

99- 12 768 Sea . 

99*2 B5-I6 Dec 94-20 94-, 

95-10 55-19 Mar 

94-4 85-2S Jun 

93-I6 B-JJ Sen 

92-22 92-7 . Ptc ,_.„i ni«u 

Est Sotos Prev- 50*881 fly» 

Ifr^D^-OpwilnUaLTO up® 
MUNICIPAL BONDS KgTI 

SI 000* PC 99- 

,01-22 W-10 ^ ” 

100- 12 98-3 3J45 

PSJffiB^nCTUWiW 


K g« 

». w S- 

96-13 946 


Close 

Moody's itopb 1 

Reuters T-ffig 

DJ. Futures . fifS • 
Com. Resdureti. ”?■* - 

w 00 * 1 ^ : ^SS.T iSf -31 ' 

p. preliminary, t,-wo» 

Reuters : bose 100 jSep. 18 , iwi. 
Dow Janes : base IW.: D*c. 31, 1974. 


Previous 

9007* 

1,529.60 

114.57 

mu 


98-28 99-B 
«■! 


ny ace; 

SSgl: 

NYME: 

KCBT: 

NYFE: 


Market Guide 

aileago Bocird Trod* 

S^^SJ^^Vork 

New York Futures Exchange 


PPG s Pamewui 

Pitney Bow t Plewey 
RavmdJamffi Reebok t 


VaUll 

warn Lamb 
York Int In 


Rockwal 

Ryder* 
SheilTma . 
SvatFarsst 
Stride Rite 
SuoriMd 6 . 
Text! Ind 
Trinava a 
UnPocCppr 
ValeroEnpt 
WasteMot 


RoreriSP 

Sara Lee s 

SnapOnTs 

SlhwestGa* 

SunCome 

Tempielnld 

Textron 

TvcoLrtn 

USShoe* 

wot Mart 

WootwihPi 


Go^miities 


London. 

Commodities 


Dhidends 


March 24 

aw 

bu A*k aree 


Match 24 

CMkc prevtaw 
HhA Lew BW A*k Bid Aik 


32V 29A ToiEd pt 3J7 128 
33A 29V. TolEdPj ^ IH 
Sk 27A TotEd Pt 11-* 


S'" M T5ifdPf Ml 93 

24V* 19V TolEodltEMe 19 


,5 30V 3SA 30A + W 
9 31V 31V 31V— V 
|7 34V 34 34V — A 

21 26 A 24 26U. — V 

7 mia 24V* 24V* 

4 iia§*TS 


1J61 1J« 1246 Jig -14 

13J7 1371 ,37, 13H —J7 M®Y 

1307 1303 l^D 1305 -15 AW> 

1330 1330 13Z7 1340 —15 0*9 

ijAO 1355 1356 1362 —22 Dec 

N.T. N.T. 1390 L«2 — J* K* 

, voL: 1300 tat* ot 50 Ions. Prev. actual MOT 


_ 14 1 u&Donars per metric hxi 


Match 24 

Company Per Amt PW Rl 

INCREASED 

American Express Q 38 « 4 
STOCK SPLIT* 


Spot 

Cxwninodities 


17400 15860 19960 >9960 17260 17260 
UrS iXn6n 16360 16360 17580 17430 
ijmm iaa.30 T6&A0 1AU0 17&3D 17160 
181JD0 181.00 1680) 17001 J5J|S 

1BSD0 1X3.00 T73J00 173-BO 1B60 IK™ 
W»S 18730 17560 17730 8M0 TB968 


AntariconExpr^C^T^torB 

unltarae Tents Peraonnei — wo^z 


Miller l Herman! 
Pri mark Core 


USUAL 

Q .11 7-15 5-29 
Q 32 A 5-15 4-15 
O -IS +80 +15 


,1V 6V Redmn 
44V 13'* Retook s 
15V* 9 Reeco 

1 ¥» PmoI 

oh 67* RealFnn 
44 28V RelchC 

n'4 7U| RMGpn 

14'A 7V ReoGvo 


46 42A 45V +2V • 

life life life + v 

8* BV BV- J4 


33V- 1®A Tanka x ^ jl ~a 41A 41 41A + « 

M 33» ToolRj. -400 -7 ‘j XBV 31V— V 

38 A 25A Tndwnk 130 « U « 32V 32 32 - V 

me 21 ToreCO - 50 ||9B 29* 2M 3V 

m IM Tosco .* 1580 33 32A — V 

j*W 25V Tosco Pi 237 73 Si 2V » »• , Uj 

4V. 2 vlTl”** 0 J4 3433 39% 38M 39V + V 

39V 25V TovRU 8 , . g 2iv 21V 21A 

^ TOSS, Ijlb’il 10 1463 349* 34V Wk- V 

asawfc*® 

16V 11 V TmCdogl.12 13 32 14V 1^ MV* 

T 35 tSSS » M “?1 H wS Sv +IV 

»V K* TrGP Pf L5° « ^ 

SS SKEW’S « " IS f& SS=S 




AMEXHighsJims 


xoics: 9S4 loto. Open Intarret: 2L528 "vgiume: 7308 tttoof 50 tons. a ae n i nt .- e 
COCOA COCOA onaddi 

misinnniG 

SdHSr 111 -* ^ ^ L— 

^Ureper^W^ US IS 

5T jg 1J= +■ g ?3S’iffi 5 ^ ^ ig ™«, s 

nS fLT. NT. 1315 - +g «w S5 IjS 1S0 ug.gg 


5a W. i5bS ttbS 191-0° 19330 Vartan con. 

•: 7308 tots ot 50 WPS. a qp n e nl .- B-mouWr; «nwarterrrj 


30 1.7 22 1048 48V 44Vn 47M +3V 
no— 9 9 Mil 9V 9V* 9V + A 


ga^TS® 'SB w 


tS, rSIgyd J® 16 13 IM 9V ^5 ± US 


4** IV Tosco „ 

3J3A 25V Tosco Pf 23/ ’A 
616 2 yiTtJWta 


37V § RtoCot 32 J 16 410 35 32V 34V +1 

£1 EunMfr 5 
SS ^ KBS ^ U w -1 *9& & *£ 


14l'* S ' RevMpf 450 13 3 IM I3JV 134A -SV 

Sv 26V Rile AW 66 1.7 22 372 39V 380* 38A— V 

4£ % SS.- • Ss 19*5 1^ ™“ w 

w* 51V rStg UO 9.9 7 1579 25V 21V 22V- A 

:CSSBS8? BS ^ 

g£ gssa?” s ■“ H Ta ^ K S£S= A 1 

S 5 s Bs* 68 U 25 HV Tm a 

■ 29V 12 Ropt^s 48 13 14 748 29V 28V 28V —IV 

S MV KS?" 1.14 U 9 4Z77 flV 48V 51V +3A 

-3V 12V Rolhchn 500 »«7 15V 14* IS +1* 

- 7Vb 3V Rowan 5151 ->. _•* _L + » 


AmCatol n 

AmTrExun 

Brosamfl 

CenSecprD 
Cmpytrcwl 
FsIConn SB 


LSBIndPt 

PltDesmn 

Qusbcorgs 


Bto^E« 

Brawn For A BrownForl 
OimbDeyn ChompHra 
DtofcenMnA g E^^nco 
FYodHoiywd WUOm 
inteorGeneri IntWg"" 
MSRExW Mojr^Wod 
PlttwovCP Png'.**™ 
StJoeUdn SCE 14»t 


Add sc 
BawlAmer s 

CtriFdCdan 

Comautraes 
EchoBav 
Harley n 
Kav Jewels 
NRM Aca pf 
PrlcComs 
wellsGord 


March 24 - 

Commodity Today Ptby.^" 

Aluminum. Ot 632S 62JJS 

Coffee, lb 1J)3 L03 

Cooper etodrolytlc. lb JOVcJl J0-JBV 

Iron FOB, 40*1 21X80 21100 

Load, to _ « UI 

PitnMtoHbVd M7 0 l97 

Sltver, frpv or 569 5645 

Steel ruitattl. tan 47100 ensm 

Steel ucropl.ton M 79-BO 

Tin, to 4J447 4.1429 

Zinc, lb 061 061 

Source: AP. 


llSulieasiiries 


S&PIOO 
Index Options 


March 24 


oner Yleta YtaW 

557 575 539 


= ;s ss: m ^ j^s jss js-hs 


NEW LOWS 3 

jtvri Fltchbg GEp 


*S. «l.: 30 Mi of 5 lonx Prw. ortuol soles: 
12 lots. Open Interest: 4M 


SS- \7Sa iSo Wl 1618 «S 1JM 

Volume: 1083 tats or 5 tans. 


Source 1 : Bourse du Commerce. 


S7V 42V Travler 238 5^ 704 54V 5fV 5JA— A 

T ^ get^ ^Sv*gtita-g 

^ St ffinl ^ 6 13 1« 3^ gA gA- * 

3B 20 V TrllBd pt -12 * j ,1 Ml 80 7BV 79V +1V 

"NlSWm Jfo T 


32V gA— * 

r?;: 

TV 7V 


As ia n 

Commodities 


GASOIL 

^'‘^'T-S^iS'l-LTS 14430 M4JB 
NUw 14*35 14375 14SJB M350 1«-75 J 4 ?^ 
5^ I44S 142J10 V447S 144* 14130 1«^ 
J? lUi 142^ 1^2 J44JD 141.5D 14280 


2SV 13V Trintv ,■= re 9 333 66« »® Sr"T I£ 

66 4514 TrtflOV 6 1-00 16 » 17V2 17V 17V + A 

21^ L» IflffiS off 76 " 2 27_. V * + * 


18 38 & » 


S MV* 25* 6»-A 
160 17V* I7ta I7V| + W 


' yiu. 22 Rownpl 2.12 6*4 1® 13te 33 33H + te 

l5v MV R^ID S39e +4 14 4996 121V 121 151V + V 


3* 3RJS8 9 S 8 a ta «« 

•J* Iltt Tultexs j* +5 13 18V IBV 18V 


^ r ps. M s *3 “C a a= 5 

11V 9V Rovosn 124 99* ®V 9V — A 


’A 9V-V f?*Ttar 


24 13V Tunexs 55 ,, 18V WV i»w 

IBV 14V* T*rtl«K j2 “a rn 427 50V 50V 5^4 + V 

50’A 29 Tyorta 3 ie 21 MO 14 13V 13V— V 

in. liu. Tyfe Au 1 ■ 


GompanyHesuUs 


64V 4BV UAL-, 1 -°° ,ja 34 ’TtS ^ ^5” * 

3SA 17V UCCEL 9 245 MV Wf 25V— » 

jt B ef 5 as™ 
ss: 255 asssR. ^ 5 „ « r r 

21V 14V URS -l|r ,-i to 1645 46V « 4«b 

48V 36 U* USFG 268 S3 W 60V «V MV 

63 S2V UBFGPt 4.10 +■ -597 42V 42 42V— «* 

46V 35 USGS 1-12 W H 2M M 37V 37V + V 

38V 17V USPCI s 47 *9946 28V 27V 281* + A 

2BV 14V USX 1-20 £2 1«S Sw 43V 44V + v 




Britain 


British Aerospace 

year 1984 19*5 

per snore — IL514 06«* 


Woolwortti Holdings 

Year 1986 1985 

Revenue 1*830. 1.740. 

P?otSrNe'- 11^3 n 8U 

Per Share — 0671 0-377 


on 

[VS 


“• “3 J ESSvilS 

268 SJ 13 >*S InE MU 60V 


in the Trib. 


JKxfdkJM | 

SINGAPORE GOLD FUTURES 
UAiperoMPce t>rev. 

High Low Settle Sjtjta 
a- N.T. N.T. 41130 406J1 

volume: 0 tats cl 100 at 

KUALA LUMPURRUaBCR 
Malaysian canto MTU* prevtoot 

Bta^ ASk BW AS* 

R t- m en 230-50 227 JO 229-50 

APT mlo 23050 2Z7-50 229 XJ 

M° y gS 22M" 215 

ai3 OTJ" ■SSr& 


ABB K'i- Jj' iXtbo 14960 140410 15060 

5S Jt' m T. 144*00 1 4000 152*22 

S yj &T 14460 149 JJ0 14M0 ,«» 

OK 5lt: N.T. 14400 149J0 ,4000 15000 

volume: 1174 hats of 10° ions. 

Sources: Heaters andUtnOon Petroleum Etc 
thonae. 


Hreorbm S71 s« ^ 

Bta Oltar YtafcJ Yield 
26-rr. bond 9*31/32 991/X2 7J8 70S 

Source; Sokmoe BtoMert. 

MerTBI Lynch TWosery index: 

Chon** tar toe doy: an. -• • 

Average yield: %' 

Source: Marin LyaA 


nv — — — v 

t — 4M — rt 

o «a - - * 

•M* W* - - * 

M m ea. — it 
9 BV 38* - 9* 

M H 27 27 V 


MCI Jee W 
I* — — 

* — — 
w — — 

M — — 

tb — — 

« R* — 
IV 21* — 
m 1* A 


Wkkes to SeSl IIX Unit, 
Seek Reverse Stock SpBt 

Los Angela Tima Service 

SANTA MONICA, California 


DM Futures 
Options 


2S*S 2 . — 1 * m ivt n 

2 L "i S 1 ** * r* 7 

2 SJ* liS ,Wl ^ ** tv 9 

2 I™ 2?* 5L M 71 n,A 

» * 1 rnunm-'- 

» W kta » ww m _ - 

■ ai m s* m ir - — j6 . ■ 

gat: tael yohxne emh: taka open lot 3031° 

Prti: ftdai *ekm* mat: taM own bROHon 
SaPMlada: 

HM12KUQ hw 2M34dD«: 29X86 +032 

Sane: one 


taOnwonMo/fc-asaw mortal cadi Perm** 


London Metals 


36V USFG ^ 268 H 4 lS 40V «V 40V 
S2V USFG Pt 4.10 

Q1 19 W7 42V 42 «V»T S 


Get the latest 
word from 


volume: 0hrt£^ glomerate, has announced « 

* u “g£ 85 percent stak^ils Bamh 

Ask Bw ff, °5£k subsidiary for £96 ' ?L 5 5i 

imS >£» H minion) to a group headed by the 

!tuo isojio Tnnnaeement 


PAP 

- Year 1984 

■- Revenue 1.930. 

pretax Net— 174.1 
pK Shore— . 0617 


1*05 3 

1.630L Year 
125+ Pratt 
PJ49 


France 

SoctetaGenerote 


38V 17V USPCI s .« 

2BV 14V USX , 1.30 L2 
S3 23V USX Pt 4flfc M 
277% 225* USX cl 225 &J 
106 14V USX ot 1025 104 

IV V USX wt -. 

34V 13A Ullmta _ 4 IS 

32V 19V UnlFrst 20 \ if 

171 B9 Unllvr 4.J4; " ll tan 
278V ,53V UnINV 7-l» JA JJ .ttl 


5& 44V «A ££V + 

•5a 27 te 27Mi 27Vi— w 


ra im 22v 

jSiro^iSSSyig 

xS » 278U.27SV. + A 


Prudential Corn, 

year 1W4 1JB 


VnlledSUUM 


7BV I53M UnINV 7.i/« « l" 1^73 gm (ft »A— JJ I 

70V 43'6 UCoifW 1+1 W 2» IfS 2^ 2BW 29V + A 

29’A 20 UCarb 1*5° ** ,1 ill ^wS 9V 9A— £ 

»?• i. .« a ,sg g »■ gg + » 

i®3 50V spy mV 
»KSl 30^ 


VNfcrn 

Safoeori 


SINGAPORE RUMgft 
gnoopern rents PgrKno 


RSSiAor 

SMaSuSr itlao 1SS i7iM 352 1 unit’s management , 

ffl2« W ™ 5SS Mil In another move aimad « 


Mar 

M 

ear 

tar 

Jm 


165 

*41 

Ui 

831 

U4 

UI 

US 

UI 

851 

U4 

UJ 

Ui 

14* 

UO 

Ml 

*47 

,8M 

US 

167 

Ui 

841 

Ut 

mm 

121 

811 

UI 

143 

— 

MB 


March 24 
Prevtaos 
EM Ask 


19125 19175 189.50 1JJZ1 


g ui ui « 

Ed. mi reLura 

CNtoiMan.MLfJT,: BRarMtalUU 
PMR Mnt ta. iuu «PW W.47XW 
SnrcaCME. 


ISIS ISS8 !3S 122 1SS : 

«<»*>. uESESlSSi proving ta balmi* slaw, 


Bum- ™ ™ ; Hrt, semlcondjidvr 

■r-*""- «“ ““ ISSSt- SE ss 

Standard Chartered Net Loss — *- 4 

Year 1984 1985 9 Months 19M 

'pretax Net— 253.7 267.9 Revenue— ‘■JJi 

pS? Shore— . 027 0653 Nrt Loss — 322 844 


I3V 8 umonc " reyy 29 29V 

31V 22V UnEtac 1.92 45 10 1*« «* 50V 

55 41V UnElpf 400 79 *; S” SOA— « 

52 MVt UnElpf 450 M 30g^ Sg MV- A 

57V 47 UnEI pt A M « « gv 

99 81V UEIBIL » |5 3 jjfc 

29 V 27-A UnElpf 2.98 102 “ S* £* M 

SSS BSi!S!B,S 

5" 7?* U0WI «aS M 19V 19V 


3fe 94 94 W 

54 29A » W«* 

PKa 

?2 93V +1V 


KUALA, L UMPUR PALM OIL 

MaloYriBB *<— t MIgr M t"” 

BW** AM 

APT 72000 72SOO 

Nwr nzoo mm 

uST 72000 72300 


M 75*. UE PtH 8 jC© m 1X7 rail 19V— W. 

IsI^SfS 


jgL ™ nooS moo «« sta 

s® ^Soo moo ntoa ® ra 

7,500 rnffi 72000 

SL 71500 72S00 72000 23000 ftS 

Volume: 754 lots of SStoita bs 

source: Reuters. 


?30o moo w reduce its nwnber of sb«W! mK- j 

moo moo landing. In addiuon, 

^IS moo todam$200mimwi^^ 
M ac oart of the company’s 19» 


Oetata oflafns* of seenritia, Bmiirial 
-fvicet or iewstofa «■! c«8* .pidtHshed 
ta ihh mmsgMA* ak aMu^a^ia 
certain ionxficncns m wtetti toe Inferna- 
ttanal Botid TribWO b ite ributod . m- 
SSsns the U»*9« od Amerxa,.^ and 

STnof rtxaatnto rfftw** of motaaei, 

uuiii mnpnnit>n»ij^'w^»A«gp”'^ 0 ^^y dtoep- 


ALUMIHUM ********* 
Stortkig per nwtrtc ion 
K— SS S* 00 0*7-0° 845-00 

^^wcathopS cw£e£3rt 799J " 

PnSL—M ?S52 MAOO 92500 91400 

c^icATNSga^aj^* “ 

Storfhni per in®trtc ton lMa “ a,,ra > 

y?? i Bum 88800 By 86600 

Pgwrd mm 87800 87500 8*u» 

Starting per motile tea 

^nMM SHS 30500 3OZO0 TOSOO 

WCffiL *9700 OTjj 39450 29900 

Starling per metncioa 

SJL-. 02500 234000 234500 

51LVEH ZMOOO 23450 2342JS8 216400 




f ^<rn 


Mr metric la* 


i iB ^V 




iTt’ 































INTERNATIONAL HERALD TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 25, 1987 









IL 5 ?* 


Nippon Sign Steel Accord 

ft. 5 ^ thathi5 company would sougbi by Deiroti’s automakers 

- >NEWYORK — cn , ~ nn^ 1 stakc m ^ vcn - and Midwestern manufiurturas of 

"■ ^Shssr 'ilDsounccid appliances and furniture. 

tow^waited accoid 8 wmiMnlw m blggest company. At a news conference in Chicago 

"StediCbip toestehtidTJUSP^ 40 percent. The venture attended by Nippon’s president, 

: : {fi® ^^S^^PanlybyOKtrad- Yuial^ ^«4en said 

: steel for nsci?” 2 to 2? °f Mlsui * Mitsubi- the plant would reduce “from 12 

Iwai Corp. which days to less than one houT the 

V, Anoffidal ai ^handle the sted safes to Japa- processing time for sheet sted used 

: :Ia®est AnMrican^tS^ f0UItt- amoioob * le Plants. in automobiles and other products. 

^ Sfonday that the neJSSS-’ ri c iS?i^^..^ fl8ree ? 3 5 tl . t - 


&*S 




gftS 

Sift 


"’ods cold mill faeflitv “Snificam because it established a superior position in the market," 

-afar South SEW*? 1 continuous cold Mr. Lueroes said. It wiU sharpy 

-. Stbctioa E? ^1“ «*» United Slates, increase productivity and "wiU 

-Wo und a half vran, 5 ^ 1 Inland would use technology devel- lower our manufacturing costs and 

Frank Luossen. infant _u • opod ^, I ' ri PPon to produce the increase our responsiveness to our 

. lJKrssea - inlands chan- smooth, hjglHjuality Seel eagerly customers," be said. 

z L ' The new m3] would have the 


5.5% Drop in Pretax Profit 




^ ^^hi! c ?^T ues< ^ eon — as the chief factor behind 


lower profit for 1986. 

Standard cited sharply increased 


from £267.9 minion in 1985. 

Debt provisions increased to 


provisions for bad and doubtful £ ^- 6 tnflhon in 1986, from £416.6 
m^uouui nnihoiL Tbe charge for bad and 


Norcms Rejects 
$542 Million 
Bidby WMKams 

. . 'Reuters 

LONDON — Norcros PLC, 


-V. \ n 

~-o 'C» a 

»& 


i 


litgj 

' ^ err*-* 

-.-iRSis; 

■' ---41-23* 


aginggroup, Tuesday rqeoed a 
£542 2 million ($876.8 million) 
bid far its ordinary shares from 
WilKams Holdings PLC 

The industrial holding group 
said earlier Tuesday it had of- 
fered 29 new Williams shares 
for every 50 in Norcros, or 
432.7 pence per share. 

But Norcros said the offer 
was unwelcome and it signifi- 
cantly undervalued the stock. 
In nddscssion trading on the 
London Stock Exchange, Nor- 
cros was quoted at 418 pence, 
op from 397 Monday. Williams 
was 15 pence hi gher at 765. 

The offer also included a par- 
tial . convertible alternative in 
which shareholders would re- 
ceive op to 205.69 million new 
-second convertible shares in 

Williams instead of or dinar y 
share allocations. 

The convertible offer, at 428 
pence per share, is on the basis 
of four Williams convertibles 
for every Norcros share. The 
cash offer is the equivalent of 
400-2 pence a share. 


doubtful debt soared to 1842 rafl- 
hon pounds, from 100.7 million in 
1985. 

“These were pretty grim profit 
figures, but the market had been 
expecting them,” said Robert 
Grant, ranking analyst with the 
London brokerage Capel-Cure 
Myers. 

Profit after tax and extraordi- 
nary items fell slightly in 2986, to 


capacity to produce about one mil- 
lion tons of the high-quality sted 
annually. Mr. Loerssen said the 
plant would eliminate 500 to 600 
jobs, but that the cuts might be 
partly offset by job increases at 
another Inland plant, which will 
supply the hot band sted to be 
processed by the new venture. 

Under the agreement. Inland 
and Nippon Steel would each pro- 
vide $150 millioa, wilh the other 
lenders supplying the balance. 

Mr. Loerssen said the target cus- 
tomers would be Japanese auto- 
makers setting up manufacturing 
plants in the United States as well 
as domestic car producers. 


Disney, France 
Sign Agreement 
On Theme Park 

Reuters 

PARIS — Wall Disney Co. 
and the French government on 
Tuesday signed a definitive 
agreement to build and operate 
Europe's first Disneyland 
theme park. 

The company said construc- 
tion oq Euromsneyland is to 
start next year on 4,800 acres 
(1,945 hectares) at Marne-La- 
Vallee, about 20 miles (32 kilo- 
meters) east of Paris. The theme 
park portion of the develop- 
ment. which will include a re- 
sort and recreation complex, of- 
fices and shopping centers, will 
take about four years to build. 

The total initial investment 
has been put at 16 billion francs 
($2.62 billion.) Disney said it 
would seek other investors from 
France and elsewhere. 

Disney said provisions for a 
second theme park on the site 
are included in the agreement 
and that the French govern- 
ment will extend the Paris Me- 
tro system to the park and build 
interchanges and roads to pro- 
vide superhighway access. 


British Aerospace 1986 Profit Fell 34% After Plant Charge 


By Warren Getler 

International Herald Tribune 

LONDON — British Aerospace PLC, one of 
Europe’s biggest manufacturers of aircraft and 
weapons systems, said Tuesday that 1986 earn- 
ings fed 34 percent to £84 J million ($136 mil- 
lion at current exchange rates) bom £127 mil- 
lion after tax in 1985. 

Those results, reflecting an extraordinary 
charge of £51 million for the already an- 
nounced closure of a manufacturing plant. 

compare with a 21 percent rise in pretax profit 
to £1822 milli on from £150.5 million. 

Meanwhile, Sir Austin Pearce, the company’s 
chairman, said BAe received a "totally inade- 
quate" offer of long-term British government 


loans to help launch two jets planned by Airbus 
Industrie, the four-nation European consor- 
tium in which BAe bolds a 20 percent stake. He 
warned that unless the company gets an offer 
approaching the £750 million it requested, “we 
will not be part of the A-330/A-340 project." 

Group sales for Britain’s leading defense 
contractor climbed 18 percent to £3.14 billion 
last year from £2.65 billion in 1985. Eamings- 
per-sharc fell to 51.4 pence from S6.4 pence. 

The company’s backlog of orders in 1986 
surged 69 percent to £8.6 billion from £5.14 
billion. About £2.5 billion to £3 billion of this 


Analysis at Klein wort Grieveson Securities 
Ltd, the London stockbrokers, said BAe’s 1986 
pretax results were at the low end of expecta- 
tions. but noted the company should be able to 
boost pretax profit in the current year by 15 
percent to 20 percent to total £210 million to 

£220 milli on. 

The company said 1986 losses in its civil 
aircraft division, which includes work on Air- 
bus aircraft, more than trebled to £7.7 million 
from £23 million in 1985 and cited fierce com- 
petition and the strength of stating. 

The military aircraft division recorded 


uuvvu. nwu« a * uauvii iu M ouuuii vi u»*J — / f r i jr 

backlog reflects its share of a £5 billion sale of slighliy lower pretax profits m 1986 of £i« 

Tornado fighter aircraft to Saodi Arabia. BAe million from £148.3 million, but profiis from 

is a member in a three-member European con- guided weapon and electronics systems rose y 

senium that builds the plane. percent to £139.7 million. 


ADVERTISEMENT 



Doubt Gist on AMC Buyout 
By Chrysler Letter of Intent 


otic tor. 100 (tea. per reomWue 
22. 12.1967: VS. *30 per ahuel. 

The div i du a l Mbabm a m wAject to to 

withholding n mne 

PARIBAS 

AMUrUSIHAUBKA WTOO H B.V. 
(FaradT aDMUSKTHATIEKANTOOR 

Van ranque de parks 
ET DES PAYS-BAS B.V.) 
AmMortam. I Tlh March. 1907. 


ADVERTISEMENT 


XEROX CORPORATION 

(CDRa) 

The undernened announce* that a* Tram 
31st March 1987 ax Kas-Aaociaiir 
N.V.. Spuutrui 172. Amsterdam. 
div.cp.no. 51 of the CDRn Xerox 
Corporation, each rep r. 1 share, 
will be payable with Dfl*. 1,33 net 
(div. per record -date 05.12.1986: ”n>ss 
$ -,73 p.sh.1 after deduction of 15^ 
USA -tax - S -,1125 - Dfb. -22 per 

CDR- Div.cpe. belonging to non-resi- 
dents of The Netherlands will be paid 
after deduction of an additional 155< 
USA -tax l- S-.112S - DO*. -J22\ with 
Dfls. 1.11 net. 

AMSTERDAM DEPOSITARY 
COMPANY N.V. 

Amsterdam. 


Ranque Vernes^^ 

& Commerciale de Paris 

OFFICIAL STATEMENT 

The Board of Dircmon. which met on Mare* S. 1087. under I he Oiainnanship 
of Mr. Cilben LASFAHCUES. approved the 1986 accounts. 

Total x»ri» amount n> 17 billion French Francs, compared with 23.9 billion 
French Francs in 1965; on increase of 7.3%. 

Nrl hanking, income stands al 5012 milli on French Francs, compared wilh 
■169.7 million French Franca in 1985: an increase of 73%. 

As the growth in general operating expenses, slowing down markedly, was 
iimiled lo 4.4%, Inc gross operating results, after ta kin g account of accessory 
uninra. shown, an increase of more than 16%. 

• r. _TLT - .• : : J >; 1 1. r.. I 1 IIQh 


,4/i ur amarreaduns. provisions and exceptional Hems, net proDi lor 2986 nos 
102 million French Francs, compare d wit h 2 million French Frants in 1985. 
Thus, BANQUE VERNES ET COMMERCIALE DE FAKJSi which is now a 
90% subsidiary of BANQUE INDOSUEZ and in which COMPACN1E F1MAN- 
HERE DE SUEZ has a 10% holding, asserts, in a contrasting economic and 
honking environment with a mixture of favorable and unfavorable [acton, the 
recovery of ate profit-making capacity which began last year. 

A pmpoiuJ shall be made t-y the Ordinary General Meeting, convened to meet on 
Miv 12. 1967. to carrv forward this result at retained income. 


77re Associated Press 

DETROIT — Chiy&ler Carp. 


holders or, it appears, the sale will 
not gp through without a second 


£1423 million, from £148.4 million do« not intend to buy Renault’s offa fc^Cbrydw 
in 1985. Earnings per share rose 14 461 mteresl m American Motor AMCs board has postponed its 
DercenL to 97Mnce in I9Rfi fmm Corp. unless it also can buy “sub- annual sharehokieis meeting, set for 

853nenvin l^S^fWtino’ninub stantially all" outstanding AMC ■ April 29, and has not rescheduled iL 
L stock, according to the litter of Tfce dday was to allow time for 

6 intent signed by Chrysler. AMCs board to finish gathering 

Analysts expect Lloyds Bank The letter, governing Chrysler' s information on the deal and present 


REAL ESTATE 
TO RENT/SHARE 


GREAT BRITAIN 


INTERNATIONAL CLASSIFIED ! ujw cost flights 


er tax charge. 

Analysts expect Lloyds Bank 
PLC wQ] renew a bid for Standard 
sometime this summer. 

Woolworth PLC 
Seeks Expansion 


REAL ESTATE 
TO RENT/SHARE 


proposed buyou 

maker from the govemtnenl-owned Renault, in addition to its 46.1 
Renault of France, was released percent of AMC common stock, 
Monday by AMC. bolds other stock and warrants that, 

"We’ve said it would be a friend- if converted, could give Chrysler as 
ly takeover and our interest is in much as 66.46 percent of AMC. 


t of the ailing auto- it to shareholders for a vote. 


seeks Expansion acquiring all" of AMC said a While industry analysts have 

Chrysler spokesman, John Guini- said AMCs approval would not be 
Rnum ven. ‘‘We're at . a period now of necessary because Renault's inter- 

LONDON — Woolworth Hold- working toward a definitive agree- esl would give Chrysler control of 
mgs PLC which earlier this month ment and we’re not going to com- AMC the letter gives more weight 
announced a 1 986 pretax profit in- ment further.” to a decision by AMCs board, 

crease of 42 pocenl over 1985, said Chrysiers proposed buyout must In the letter, Chrysler agreed to 


mgs PLC Much earlier this month ment and we're not going lo com- AMC the letter gives more weight 
announced a 1 986 pretax profit in- ment further.” to a decision by AMCs board, 

crease of 42 pocenl over 1985, said Chrysiers proposed buyout must In the letter, Chrysler agreed to 
Tuesday that it intended to look for be approved by the three autotnak- continue U3. production of the 
opportunities to acquire specialist ers’ boards, AMCs shareholders Renault Alliance subcompact, 
retail businesses. and the U.S., French and Canadian whose UJS. sales have nearly dried 

The company, which was the tar- govemmcnis. Bui Renault’s approv- up, until a still undetermined date, 
get of a hostile takeover bid last al is tied to that of AMCs 13-mem- Chrysler did not agree to sell a 
year by Dixons Group PLC said ber board, of which five represent set volume of the just-introduced 
itsprofit of £1 15.3 millio n ($71.6 Renault. The other eight, including Renault Medallion, an compact se- 
aawaoi) was a major step toward AMCs chief executive, Joseph E dan, but agreed not to sell any 
making Woolworth tire most prof- Gappy, must be convinced that the competitive vehicles through AMC 
itable retailing group in. Britam. deal is in the interest of AMC stock- dealers until the end of 1990. 


SHEARSON: Sole h Approved 


ADVERTISEMENT 


advertisement 



(Continued from Back Page) 


ACCESS VOYAGES 


EMPLOYMENT 


EXECUTIVE 

POSITIONS AVAILABLE 


AUTO SHIPPING 


TffJSnKSSSt I investment manager 

In Gam ha a ta$e rttmohond irv 
womeni group. Eapuience required: 

• Monqgwnert of invesmert porffeot 
with on indentancfatg of oB major 
intamamnal learity martelL 

• Hn onaer of inveamens. 

• Analysis of business proposal 

Please forward resume with nforma- 
han of educaiiandl background and ax- 1 
coroner m I 

m. Nelson Gross. IQ A Sd de b Foire, 
Luxembourg Gty, Luxembourg 



On* Wav 
New York F9W 

Roumf Trip 
FI 890 

San Franaco 

FI 950 

F3640 

La Angela 

FI 950 

F3640 

Atlanta 

FI 800 

F3240 


FI 900 

F3350 


FI 295 

F2590 


FI 800 

F3350 


FI 440 

F25W 

Morireal 

FI 380 

F2450 


FI 750 

F2800 


F2270 

F3640 


F2S50 

F3920 

Mexico 

F2600 

F4595 


F4690 

F5630 


F4635 

F6520 

Tahiti 

F5190 

F6990 


AUTOS TAX 


and more de sft ndiora - 
15% daoount on Is) & business dess 

PAHS fab 111 42 21 46 94 
A rwa P larra I— mi. 75001 Paris 
Mateo - RBI Onda le i Us HsAta 

IMc. 1J5.1111 


j: .'fViV.’MI 




(CowHhi from Brat fiaanoe page) 

sory, asset management, market re- 
search,and conrolting busmefses. 


shares will he sold to the public 
shortly through the initial public 
offering, American Express said. A 


5UUV4I) UUU v wm ww m mum t “ _ _ _ 

OfGcials of tire companies have rcpstntooo stauaent x ; ejected 

said that a key aim will be to intro- to be filed Monday that wul give o^i72,Ajn«iad»ni,**^-no.3ai 
dnee Japanese companies in which, details about, the structure of tire ^taan-Affid^rffltoCDii.1 
kc " r -flT! transsctkie and tire mice expected ihtaBKt*I«hreMCfc,Iii 


-'■'IS - s.duce Jimarrese companies in winch details about, toe : structure a ure 
‘■/..r 3 ? '^Niroou Life has a significant invest- tamacton and tire pnee ejected 

’’ ment to tire inieniational capital f« the Aares. Amen^ Express 

mmkrts. This could provide Shear- wffl get tire proceeds of tire sale of 
‘ son a great deal of business in the easting shares, with new-share 

'f 'f!?: °^a . « *. i i nrm wd c oaitip tfi 


MATSUSHITA BJECTRIC 
INDUSTRIAL CO. r LTD. 

<CMa) 

The mikmwd aiai rmnw dot aa bran Sira 
March, 1987 at Kas Araodtoie N.V- %ob- ' 
toss 172, AnNtadwi. fivxpjno. 32 (accom- 
pcokd l^sii "Affidavit”) rfanCDRiMilB 
Aba BmHc lukrarid C®„ UdL wiD be. 
parable wfth Db. S*BQ, act per CDR, 
mr. 100 rira. and with DSo. 5Rr not per 
GDB, xepr. LOOO aba. (fv. par iraonUtte 
2O-1L1906 pane Yen 


son a Ktcau ucti wi muuiwi in : « . ; _ 

Euromarkets, where it has not been proceeds going to Shearson. 
as stremg as in the United Stales. American Egress has also grant- 
Under tire transaction, Ameri- ed Nippon Life a five-year warrant 

can Express wfflsefl 13 milBon new topurdrasel million of its shares at 
shares m Sreaison to Nippon Life $100 each. That number would rep- 

a rarm .It! T •af-TL. ninliA HKMlt ffriVTl Half flf 1 IMfCfl l t frf 


DM NIPPON PRWTBIG GO., LTD. 

(CPIU) 

The unil aiaen ad a onramcra dial a* from 31at 
March 1907 ai Kn Aflao ri a iio N.V., Spni»- 
traat 172. Aartenbai. dlr^piM. 32 (to 
eraapanled by an "AfBdmrii") of die CDR* 
Dai Nippon Printiaa Ca, WL, will be 
payable with DU*. 534 net par CDR, 
iepr. 100 aba. and wU. DRa. 33^40 net 


of 15% Japmeaa — Yen 75,- - Dfb.L02per 
CDR, iqr. 100 rfn, Y« 750,- - Dfla. Ift20 


snares m ano- sou w i-nppuu * — r’^7 % t , 

for $538 milhon. Initially, the stake resent kss than half of 1 percent of 
will be in the form of convertible tire 215 nrinkre shares ouisumdmg. 


Urn, n-pr. rujsttL. in raw,- - non. «vw 
per CDR. ihk 1.000 she. Wuhout «n ABdaril 
&% JanMx - Yon 100 - Dfla. L36 per 
CDR. iter. 100 ih^. Yen 1000 — DDb. 13.60 
per CDR. lent LCCOobk. vffl be dednmed. 
After 20JJ6.I9B7 the £r. wiB only be pad 
under ibd u nhai of 20% bpjn reap. Dfls. 


preferred stock, paying a 5 percent After the transactions are corn- 
dividend. The shares will be con- pleted, American Express will own 
verted into common stock after about 60jpdtJentof Srearson's 100 
government approvals are received, million shares. American Express 
American Express will sell 8J has told Mppan life that i t wffl 


5,46: Dfla. 54,60 act per Q« rape rap. 100 
rod L000 aba. eaeb. in a n a wd a nii e wab iba 

Ja^mtuin tu jcpdatkmi 

AMSTERDAM DEPOSITARY 


[t i .. t v.Vh'NhA’j 


Amsteidam, 17th March, 1967. 


75,- - Dfk. L-perCDft, repr. iOOshs., Yen 
750,- “ Dfla. 10,- per CDR, repr. LOOOab*-, 
Without an Affidavit 20% J«fM>x — Yen 
10ft- - DO*. L34 pnr CDS, rept 100 aha, 
Y ai 1D0Q.- - DQo. 13/10 per CDR, rape. 
1.000 aha., will be deducted. After 
3Q.06.1987 dn div- will only bo paid under 
deduction aT 20% JopJzx rap. Dfla. 5,-; Dfla- 
50,- net per CDR, repr. ran. 100 and 1.000 

can hi accordance with tbs Japanme tn 
regulation*. 

AMSTERDAM DEPOSITARY 
COMPANY N.V. 

Amsterdam, 17th March 1987. 


020448751 (4 lines) 

Nadarhaven 19-21, Amaudam 


PARIS AREA FURNISHED 


UNIQUE 

MARBHB.TOWB 
MY - WEEK - MONTH 

SUPERB 

EQUffPED APARTMENTS 

Studio - 40 Mire. 

2 roam - 60 tqjn. 

3 room - 105 tqjn. 

4 ream - 140 sire. 

WITH UMQtS COramaNS 

UNIQUE: room attractive prices 

UMQUE l u meetOB nnervatiora 
IMK2U& mtnfkxy nrviai 
UNIQUE, oven morn interesting 
rental lyttam 
Don’t wait. 

CONTACT US NOW 

RATDIB. 

INTERNATIONAL 

14 run du Tbatfra, Pan ISh 

Tef: 45 75 62 20 


DPIOMACYt Advisor required to de- 
velop Master* Dagraa in ha e nioliond 
Diplomacy d Amuieon College Gxn- 
pw in London. RepGsc to Box 40428, 
b set na tional Herod Tribune, 63 Long 
tee, tonkin, WC2E 9JH England. 


GENERAL POSITIONS 
AVAILABLE 

WANTED: lode & Gendanro by in- 
temetanti pubhhng group at free- 
lance ogenb. Earn 3TS areunBian 
by c o rtoding hotels, restaurants, 
reap, banks etc m home area or 
other countries of ywdioiai fra ora 
[e no elenfl rarfin* puMari t w. Please 
oontad Europe Iwl France. 7 run 
Pierre Cbutonl. 42000 St Etienne, 
France. Telex 307117 F, 


17IH VHUEHS. Beautiful stu 
comforts. Short term pacdle. 
Tel 43 80 11 29. 


SHIPSIDE 

BUY YOUR NEXT CAR 
TAX Rff OR USE OUR 
BUY BACK PROGRAM 

For free catalog and/or 
buy/ back folder contact: 

SWSBE BV, P.O. Bax 430. 2130 AK 
HoofddorpL The Neshaireds 
Phone (02SB) 14500. Telex 74897 

Showroom & DeSveryoantet 
d Amsterdam Ah port 

SfaraOECrap, 50 Orolmit Bdae ftt 
Atonlvde, New Jersey 07645. USA 
Phene (201) 5730400. Telex 427965 



HOTELS 


U&A. 



IMPORTANT BETBOSPECim 

of impresaonnf, modem, abstroct and 
nnreafat schoot Pcnntmgs, Aowingr v 
sculptures raid fthos at AbdiniEy, 
Braque, Buffet, Otogal, Choray. DoS. 
Degas, Laurencin, narco, Tobiasag, 
Utnlo, Wunderfith etc. at 

GMUSCS VBtSAILLB 
23 VatfinariiaaL 2018 Antwerp 
until March 17. Sundew to Friday, 
lOran to 6pm. CJased Sotuday. For 
more mfunuuhon Tel: 323/234 3736 


AGOICE DE CHAMPS rtTSEES 
PATHS 81H. lab 42 2S 32 2S. 
Bant in f>gh cfcas buddmg 
13fc Modem dudn, F35DU 
15tfe Studo, terroca, F4500 
lTths 2 rooms, F4900 
Moron 2 roana, FS200 
15th: 2 rooms, potmo, F6700 
Tomes: 2/3 rooms. TSSOO 


million new Shearsoo shares to the maintain at least a 40 pacent how- 
brokerage’s employees, of which mg m Shearsra until 199a 
7J5 million will go to selected em- The board of American Express 
ployees and. I million into an can- also voted for a 2- for-] stock 'spKt, 
ployee stock ownership plan. which will take effect for sbare- 

It was not clear bow much new holders as of April 3. The quarterly 
capita] the sale of these 8-5 million dividend was raised to 38 cents a 
Ses would raise because of un- share, before tte spht, from 36 

‘ m ■ At. * — laAi»rn*p fill twiri/fhlllADf 


BTOBNATie m 
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES 


Bret ma ac 4/5 rooms, prabna R2LRI0 
Bo St Louis 6/7 room, ftODOO 


ctiare s woiuu [huh, — — — — i - — : „ • - 

certainw over the price Sheareon cents. The board s aaootmcemeat 
^11 set for its offering. But analysts was made after the stock market 
:sifcHbat it woiMbe coiuiderably dosed on Monday, m^Amcnran 




TESTS: Winnowing Out 'Quitters’ 
rateta-Hi ^SSS^ZtSSSfJSL 

it is the only lest ihat can pre^t fudements in selecting the words 
who is a quitter and who ' « * 8°^ isedwdesoibe a personality type. 
“The test is apphobte*® any joo Qne 16-y ear-old who was diag- 
Where there is a high niluic sraie 10ycars ago as an amorpbe, 

and a strong Iikeiihood of being ^ aj^rphous type, on a French 
rqected,” said Mr Seligman. ps^okmcai test stfll has not got- 

Life lnsum.ee Co^ 

to hire 121 insurance sales- 

“ . < . iKo Alandara i — ' ' 



• agreed to mre 141 , — , 

^>pte who flunked the standard 
.personality test used m themsir- 
ance business but who scored high 
on the optimism scale of the Artn- 
butional Style Questionnaire. After 
a year, the “optimistic” group con- 
sistently outsold members 
a&er group who had been selected 
tyffi mse they scored high the 
industry pmaodiqr ^ 

on the pcssimistjc end of the Aby 
leSL jt , 1 ^ tact 


fittores 

SSI 


ndustry pnoodiV IS ;?* GOLD ^SILVER . •• 

ffllhc pcssimistjc cad of the ASQ £ 

■*nie main assumption of the 

E '&&&* 

dfl examine other factors m . exceeding 250 

km 10 his own shortcomings- — ^Jntricts per calendar month. 

-ojxfund-1 

Telex; 277065 

^denr nette d’inveotaire ^^buc clearing 

U.S. G136.84 455 A- Ainu.* - 

• fit.BUtMUItnJX7 


Dollars, Franks, Marks, 
Thalos - what? 

THALOS AG is a licensed -Swiss securities broker and investment 
management company. And since our brokers and traders were 
brought upin the tough world of US finance, we can offer themter 
national Investor the best of both worlds: 

US Investment and brokerage services... made in Switzerland! 

To see what it can mean for you, just attach 
your business card to this clipping or fill out 
the coupon below. 

Well send you, com pletely free of char ge, 
the next six issues of our highly regarded 
securities market commentary. 

THALOS AG ■ Baarerstr. 73 ■ CH-6300 ZU6 2 ■ Switzerland 



City and Country 


Telephone 


Embassy Service 

(AMfiMtetN 

75001 Pm 

YOUR REAL ESTATE 
AGENT IN PARIS 
45.62.78.99 


M A FAMOUS BUUMG 

The Oaridge Residence 

for 1 month or more 
Alia, 2 or 3-«oo<n 
apartnwiH ora swUI a 
Ira moving into right away. 

TEL 43 59 67 97 


ESCORTS & 



INTERNATIONAL REGENCY NY 


ESCORT 

SBtVKE 

USA & WORLDWIDE 

Hood office in New York 
330 W. 56th Si.. MY.C. 10019 USA 

212-765-7896 

212-765-7754 

MAJOR CSBXT CARDS AND 


Mu te Miwbanhipi AvrakUa 


LONDON 

Porfann Escort Agency 

67 CMtern Street, 
Uodkm W1 

Tab 486 3724 or 486 1158 
Al molar awfif card* oetaa ta d 


WOK1IIWDG ESCORT SERVICE 
212-838-8027 or 753-1864 


MAYFAIR CLUB 

E SCOR T SStVICE frora 5pm 
tOTTHHIAM (pi 10-4254155 
TVS HAGUE (0) 7IU0 79 96 


CAPRfCE-NY 

escoer svke m raw yosk 
Ta= 212-737 8291. 


London Student-Secretory 
ESOOKT SStVKX 
Tti: 01 72727 67 


** ZURICH 558720 ** 

Private: Taamm Gold* Sanripi 
Craft Cards Accepted 


** GENEVA ★* 

519HAME Escort Senriea. 443874 

** ZURICH ** 

Caroline Escort Sava. 01/ 2526174 


*****+GENEVA BBT 

ESCORT SatVICE. 022/21 03 40 


* GENEVA * GINGER'S 

S COST 5BMCE. 022/34 41 8ft 


** ZURICH ** 

Top Escort Sarvfca. Toi 01/41 76 09 


* AMSTERDAM * 

ESCORT SERVICE. 68 11 20 


ZURICH - NATHALIE 

ESCORT SERVICE. 01/47 55 82 


CBN Tjft l t0 gXff 1 AMSTERDAM ROSTA E5CCRT Ser- 

cori Service. Graft cartte. 743 8352 vice. fQ} 21362833. 

OtAMftiEGBfEVA GtflOE larsioa. FRAMOFURT -TOP TOT QCORT 

let ZSWr/. *" “***’*‘“ “ “■ 




Sarvioa. 069/5588-26 


LONDON ORIENTAL GUIDE rad Es- 
cort ServKo. Tak 01 -243 1442 


MILAN VJ.P. mTONAIKMAL b, 

cod Service. TeL (3921 461125. 


MUS ^r«re5^ c BC0RT MnAN EXCLUSIVE nniHitaift Borat 
vc*i Tel: 02/520 23 65. Service. Tat (392] 869 1439 



XXTUNA ESCORT SStVICE. London 
01 555 8611. 


LONDON 



FUNDS AVAILABLE lor quali- 
fied valuable projects world- 
wide SF 6%. U.S.S 9% approx. 
Fast response upon receipt ot 
complete professional pack- 
age. Also available Credil 
Enhancement bank guarantees. 

JEFFERSON BANK* TRUST 

Reply to: MteslreeJpad 27, 
3766 BRSoest (NLJ. 


INTERNATIONAL 

BUSINESS 


Appears every 
WEDNESDAY 

aee yoar •dvertkeroem, contact 
it office myDorenwy or 
Mr. Hax Fcnero* 
Inunialloaal 
BtnUMwA 
181 Ave. O^db-Cnlle, 
92S21 NmatyCedex, 

Fwdm efr 

ToL- 4«7-93-00 
Tebro 613595. 


AD mofor cradB onb oenptad 


LONDON 

BELGRAVIA 

barf Service. 

Tel: 736 5877. 


AR1ST0CATS 

london boot Service 
128 W^nraa St, lotion W.l. 
Aa major Gwfit uni Acctfriad 
IS 437 47 41 / 4N2 
IS noon ■ riad n^ M 


escoersstvia 

(416)923-6334 


NEW Y0RK-CHICAG0 

Interface: Escort Service 
NY 2124567900 Ovraga 3126429222 


***** MADRID 

Glemera Eicert Serviee. Tet 25? 90 CO. 


CHBSEA BCORT SffiVKE. 

51 Beaodanp Plow, London SW3. 
Tel, 01 5W 6513/2)49 (4-12 pm] 


GENEVA ESCORT 

SERVICE. Tak 46 tl 58 



MUNICH - SECRET ESCORT & Glide 
Service. Tat 009/ 44 86 038. 


NUMCH-BIONDY ASONJAEsoxt 
Service. TeL 31 1 79 00 or 311 H 06. 


BRU5SS NEW ftUUBSSA ESCORT 
ondGiwfeSetvira. Tat 02/538 19 37 . 


CHM5 LONDON BOORT Sanies. 
TeL 01-589 8648 


MUNICH - REMEMBS ESCORT Ser- 
vice. Tat 91 23 14 


\TWP'* cattma - 


V1»«A COWEY LADY beat Sar- 
nee. Tet 31 2681 


FRANKFURT NUMBS ONE Etaort 

5ervioe. Tet 069/84 48 75 or 84 4876. 




AMS1BIDAM. BC0RT SERVICE 
2000 Tot |3) 20-91 1030 



HAMBURG - ROYAL ESCORT Ser- LONDON COMMA VIP Earn Ser- 
wx. Tet MO/5534145. noajek 5» 3177 


*UNKH ‘.PRESTIGE ■ Muffing 
bcort Service. 009 1 580 6844 


HIB404 spaoidng EEC Evnrt 
" III?. 

























































































I 


Page 14 


Tues day^ 

AMEX 

Closing 


Tables include the nationwide prices 
up to the closing on Wall Street 
and do not reflect late trades elsewhere. 

Via The Associated Press 


Utaonlti 
HifcnLon Slock 


Dl*. VIA PE 


SU. 

IBhHigtiLB* 


rjosi 

Qttor Cft ne 



INTERNATIONAL TRIBUNE. WEDNESDAY, MARCH 25, 1987 


76% 4>ft BrnFB 
4% 2% Bu ctJi n 

6ft $ Buckhpl JO f.l 

3t 18% Buell » 

M ift Bvstis 


IA W 


X 


li 12 
37 


*4 70ft 76W. 76% 

3 j a S> 

3 s’* * 

-a 

3 


IP'S 

15% 

3'“ 

2% 


9ft 

35% 

3 

12ft 

12k* 


17 

lift 

7ft 


U 17 

in 108 

50 


J2 16 
,18a 1.9 20 


141* 4ft ACI Hid 
141* 10ft AClPf LM 
17ft 9ft ALLabS .12 
16ft 8% AMCs 10 
3ft 2'* AOI 

&y* 3 abco 

41ft 32% ATT Fd S A5I 2L2 
81* 31* AantPr JMe .7 

6k* AcmeU 
tv. Action 
1% Acton 
IV. AdmRs 
21'* 14 AdRslEI 
254* 16ft AdRinli 
16 7% AlrExp 

14* ft Ala men 
6ft AlbaW 
7*t Alflns 
14* AlnTre 
64* Alpha in 
6% AlpInGr 
% v* All or n 
Sift 39 Alcoa pf 3J3 
OS’* 154* Alms 
6% 34* AmBrtt 

40ft 141* Amootll 
184* 11'* AmBllt 
194. 12% AmCbln 
B 3 V. AmCOP 
51* 2’* AExFF wl 

Bft AFrucA 

71* AFrucB 
. _ 2'* AHIIhM 
78'* 104* A! wee I 
231* 141* AAfcroA 
224* 144* AM11B 
54* 2 AMBW 

74* 24* AmOil 

S3 40 APell 
14ft 948 APrec* 


22 14V. 14V. 14j< 

5 144* 144* 144* 

si&tc'S t 

r * »:; 

n gv nt-it 
9ft 0ft 94* + % 
74a 2»* 2J* + % 

21* 2 ,2V« T ^ 

184* J*. !$. T £ 


16 

101 

IB 

379 


j* 

20 

.15 


112 2318 274* 23U + 4* 

s ,5 5 

9V *% 9Vi— 4* 

Bft BV* 84* t It 

... a a a=5 

30 5 g ,2 £ "K "£+£ 

TDOj “9 ft 49V. 4*'“ 

72 mi 35% S4J6 35% +14* 

'j 48 910 40’* 384* 39% — % 
in n 28 is4k is% iw- % 
270 MW 204* + *k 

B nn A Jft 5 + “ 


394a 21V. CDI 
8Vi 2% CM I Cp 
"V. % CM*. U> 

IZft 74i CSS 
28 'u lift Cahlvsn 

14% 10 CoaSNJ 

174* 11% CaglflA 
27% 18% COIJkVS 
14'* 6'* Coloroo 

18V. II'* Com ca 
1941. 13 CMarc g 
2e'A 11% CdnOc-a 
374* 20 CWneA n 
Sift 2148 CWIneB 
14'.. 748 CaptIFd 

54* Cordis 
24* CareE B 
3 1 * CareE A 
64* Camil n 


ID 

744 

7% 

94* 


27 

15 

$8 S W 

44 U D 
28 1.7 

- S 

12 


5 

U 70 
77 ‘ 


.10 

.10 — . 

.12* 1A 3 


ill tn 

9 114* lift lift 
137 25% 2SW WW— w 
44 157* 1534 15V. 
f} 14** J44* 14% + % 
jo in, 19V* 194* — 4* 

^Ijp 

,s f p r 

38 11 II t* 

39 44. 44* 

59 3V. 348 

80 9ft 84. 


+ ft 
— VI 
— ft 

6 

4** 

348 + 4* 
BV.— V* 


84 


84* 

19'* 


52 CoroP Pi 500 10 
44* CasMon -371 A3 

13 1 .. CasllA 


Jsbfc7 .,5 

34 31 
45 


70 


.72 

3* 

24 

sac 


12 20 
IK 16 
lJ li 
J 


74 


20 5 4W 5 

549 44* 4V* 4W — ** 
12 393001 144* 131* 

10 ' " 


jle U 10 
53 75 11 
it IB 10 


1200 5.7 20 


40b 24 IS 

120 27 13 


270c Li 
20 2.7 25 


.18 


4.1 

12 91 


d l- 

r j: 


134* 

2 

ia>* 
68 ’* 
23 'A 


94i 6Va ArflRIIv 750eM3 16 
104a 31* Am RdVl 

4 ASCIE '<* 

Vi ASCiwI 
34* ATBCtlC 
63** A oho pr 329 42 
iaw a otw sc , ,, , , 
24W 23V. A 0112 un US 44 
row 1848 Aolflpr 1.15 5i 
714 4 A alt* SC 

75W 87 A bmy prT.75 
3648 28Vi A bmy sc 
7*48 71V* Add pr 
3BW 21V* Add SC 
B57* 541* A xon un 345 J.1 
saw 47V. A ion pr 345 
304. 7 A .on SC 

2"* 14* Am PC I 

1« (4* Anool 

3V. iv« Amucb 
15** 10'* Andrea 
IS* 7'u Anpeles 
48 AngEn n 
74* ArsCm n 

24* Armlrri 
4 1 * Armel 
91 5 ArrowA 


17 
' 115 42 


6.1 


.06 10 


9 
3 

.72 52 U 


.... 14V. + V* 
136 13 12V* 12W + V, 

109 3V. 3W ,3V* 

s %% 18^ + w 

n 19V* 10W 184* 

102 4 34* 4 

79 74* 7W 74* 

13 484* 48V* 484* + W 

14 1SW 15H ISW + W 

35 8U BU O’- 

333 10 Va 94* 94A— * 

215 648 6 W 6'* — V* 

87 1W 1>* I}* , . 

38 44* 4'«. 44* + J* 

38 69'8 *8W 6BW— i“ 
57 214* 21". 214*— J* 
lOfffl 2SW 25W 2S"i + W 
1812 M 1 * 20' * 20 J* + * 
1299 5W 5 5W + ■* 

61 75 74 74V.— V. 

103 34V. 33 W»-V;> 

433 T8''7 78 Vi TIP* + ’4 
» 38V. +,W 

1 87W 874* B7W +l»9 
3 58 u . SB 5841 

100B 30’* 29V-. 30 — * 


It* 

9W 
74* 

10 



3041 194* Arundl 


20 1-i 


104* 

144m 

2‘- 

748 

28 

lv. 

74* 


sv* Asmr a 
6W Astro ■ 

•* AS] role 

5W AStrol pt 
H 'a Atari n 

4* AIlsCM 

31. Allas wi 


20 1.9 


11 


r* iik + J* 

248 2V. 2 V. — W 

17W I2W i-SS^. 

9** 9k* 9VS + 

Hi 1-^ IV. 

9W BW <W + 

TVi 34® 2W 

. 12W 1IW W* + ls 
3 22** 22W 2242 — -* 
572 IIP* 10W 1^*— * 

.’4 ’S 7 it | + ,‘ 

29 74* 7'8 74a — 

538 26W 26 26y* - ^ 

526 IVb 9* 1W + ■* 
1® r* 7 7V* + w 


12 

126 

•* 

1 

18 

38 

22 

3 

07 


JUb SA479 

jr* 26** Col Ed 2200 7.9 
54* CFCdo n ,1® U 
42 3J4t CenMPt 150 BJ 

[i 11 CeniSe _220el64 

31 28W CeoSPjO 

15V* 04* Cernril 

30V. KA* CtrrBu 
BV. 44* Crloc 
274 m av. ChDevn 
274* 8V. ChDvAn 

& 1*S. CiimpH 

ch, aw cnmoP 
25 1 7V. CtltMOA 

3 174* QllMdB 

lO-T* 9 CHIP** n 

274* 194. CliiR« 

94* 54* CtitDwO 

nrv. 484a Citadel 

25V. 12W CI1FS1S 

445* 33 ChGas 

2I'« I8H Clobrwt 3J1 

»* K Clobrwt 
674* 44 Clorml 
ST* 2V. Coonltr 
9W 5W Cotw 
it 4 CotnF *»t 
44V. 20’* Comfd* 
u BV* C online 

6V. Comim n 
ItU ComoD 

6’* CmpCn 
7w CmFct s 
9’ a Ctnolrs 
10'. Cmptrwl 
7S'-a 184* Cnchm 
164* 10W Cannlv 

* 3'. Conasl 

«. Cana wt 
«a ConawtP 
3V. Conoun 
T viCnsEP 
*, ConsOG 
a'. Constnn 
314 m 1748 CnntMII 
84* 14* Conysl 

224* 1648 Cop lev 
*v* 34* CosmCr 

6V. 34* Courtld 

58Va 37 V. Cross 
43 
28 
22 
V 


3 »?> + a 

36 77V. Z7V. V*y-r Jj 

'%&§§ 

53 ltd llV. IP-— 

5 23W 231* 23W— ^ 

ns** sy+s 

ii? Sw §£ fa-* 

«*®S5gi5 
,ii ^ pEjH 

119 5648 58 SW8 + W 
152 24 234* 734*— 4* 

11 445* 444* 444* + *8 

74* Vi* 74* + W 


359* 13U. EdnBa 
29% 21 EeolEn 
ISVa 6% ElecSd 
74* Eblnor 
8% Elswtti n 
11* EmMed 
416 EmpAn 
74* Em Cor 
5U. Endvco 
4Vt EnDvl 
348 ESD 
5 EnIMk 9 

8W Eotvgn 

214* 11% Erolnd 
30 1548 Ester 

248 IV* Esprit 
409* 33V* E*qRd 
tSVi 04* EtzLBV 
20 101* EvrJ B 

17V* 10W. EvrJ A 
13 748 Excels 


4 'it 
W48 

iau. 

7 

un* 

74* 

11 

13** 

14*. 

un* 


,M 2193 37V. 3SW 374* +2 

1017 21VJ 2Ka |1 -J 
1 50 1448 13% 13%-' 

in 34* 3v. 3*.— w 

77 9U. 94* fW 

jOto 2 31 UW li !«* + J4 

Ms 13 675 6W 

JM 2 10 193 134* 124* 13—1 

A9t U 363 356 74* 7J* 748— W 

1 sa iii 44 m 7% tv* + w 

20 64* 448 6V. + Va 

3242 14 1248 134*— V. 

34 9 84* W* 

17 32 19% 19W 1W* 

11 15 4 1048 1046 1848 

92 lit. IV* 1*6 + 1* 

12 92 II 38W 3BW 38W + W 

9 948 9V* 948 

jt 12 3 174* 17V* 174* + 4* 

12 21 89 1648 154* 16W + W 

32 13 56 II IDS* 11 + 'A 


A0 


.10 

20 

Ji 


A0 


1A 12 
13 
IB 

2 


374* 234* Fotolnd 
199* V3V8 FoIrRns 
20 18V* FoICbln 

7M> 44* Fldato 

12V. 1Q1A FkHFrtn 

0* FAiraFn liOO llA 

18% 12% FtcSn" »A5e 82 ” 
1548 10 FstFdn 
12«* 648 FWymB 

174* 10 Fslcm 
ni* 124* FlsdiP 
217* 15V* EltcGE 


Me 4J 


31 

J8 2.9 6 
Alt 52 32 
JO* 12 11 


ir* 

24',-. 

1144 
264* 
21 W 
10 ': 


1% 

4* 

6 

JVs 

Ti 

15V. 


50 U 
24T 


23e 


23 


17 

82 lOW 10H ID 1 * 
85 
31 
31 


AOo.2 15 


13 
12 

1 8.1 j5 

.lie 1A IS 

a,- 1 60 m 11 

3248 CrowIM 1XO 14 15 


44 V. 431* 43 J* — 
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NTERNATIONAL FUNDS (Quotations Supplied by Funds Listed) 24 March 1987 

Net owe! ra'dc g *” t f^ l TTf^i^fi < ?nni twl ^SSiSy " TO-lrrw»l«ilr. 

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1481 (w) vonderttll Assets— 


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Alberto 93 
Allied Irish VS 
Amerfcm Ejaxw 97 
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BCD Dl SkJUO 92 
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8k Boston 01 
Bk Boston 98 Con 
Bk Gretat 91/97 
Bk Montreal 96 
Bk Mont red JulK 

3 k Montreal 71 

Bk NOW Scndo 08/93 
BkNovc5cofla94 
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Bankers Trust 00 
Bankers Trust 9* 

Btl Capitol 94 

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Balnd06uil99 

Blce97(Cap) 

Bice Nov 96 
Ba Indosue: 97 1 Cop) 
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Cammwitt Australia 98 
Comp Fin Oc97(M!ti) 
Council Of Europe 93 

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* 16156 
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G-T, MANAGEMENT (UK1 Ltd. 

Ir) G.T.Aoollod Sderrce — 

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-Id) G.T. Asia Fund. 


Id) G.T. Australia Fund— 

-(d) G.T. Berry Japan Fund — 

( w) G.T. 9 loiectinj Health Fwtd - 
Id) G.T. Bond Fund- 


-I d i G.T. Deutschland fund. 
-( a ) G.T. Dollar Fund 


* 17J5 UNION BANK OF SWITZERLAND 

* 2432 -(d) Band- Invest — — SF ,6275 

* 8.93 -( d 1 DM- In vest bonds — DM 

s TOJA -(dl ESPAC Spanish - 

* 2X66 -Id) Fonsa Swtss W*-„ 

8 1275 -( d ) Froodl F rendiS tk^ 

< i>*e -id) Gertnoc German 5 h - — — 

S fl.76 -(d) Glablnvmt sh.— — 

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SFr 13480 
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SFr 1B1JD 
SFr 109 JO 
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Mend.- - ; space daily. Telex Atetthew ot 61 3595F for furriTer infom3ahon. _ 


Asia Weekly net asset 
Racifie value on 
Growth US $33.35 

Rind Listed on the 
Amsterdam 
Stock Exchange 


* 


Information: _ 

Rmon. Heliiring &. Pierson N.V. 
Hmnrtgracht 214, 

1016 BS Amsterdam, 


HAVE YOU MADE 50% 
ON YOUR CAPITAL IN 
THE PAST 12 MONTHS? 

0, 

% 



50% 


If you have trot 
contact us ah 

MPtconrtsnmaaaimavf pa 
8 gun Thafcerq. 04-1201 Gawra. 
Tek 22-32 35 56 289 732. 


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AN 086 97J7 9757 
635 - WTOM0.15 
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lMriis Fargo 97 (Cap) 
Wens Forgo Jut 

ZJgB&n 

WoodsMe Flnnux97L 
MoodsMe FInaaco 97F 
world BkPve 
nbridBkaim 
Yokohama 91/9* 
Yokohama 97 (Cap) 
2MdraMias591 


tft 

6ft 

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4ft 

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Santa Barbara Augkt 
- ratUrtoreSeows 
...Mint Fla 91 
Scotland lrU92 
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3ec Padflc 92 
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seintsr - 
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Soe Gen Tranche 196 
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tft 1584 98X8 WTO 
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Pounds Sterling 


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Abbey Not WGb 
Abbey Nat 92/00 <3i 
Alliance + Lelc 93Gb 
Amanoo+ Lake 94Gb 
Anglia 98 Cb 
AnoUa 5epl9t Gb 
AnZ Bkg97Gb 
Bk Montreal 94 Gt> 

Bk Nava SeMta 08 Gb 
Bk Tokyo SUVOOK 
Bqindosun9lGb 
BBtgfaimWGb 
Brad + Blag AprWGb 
Br«ol+ West 92 GO 
BrtktreitaWGb 
Britannia 9o Gb 
OHcarpWGb 
atfeora 89/91 Gb 
CepmefOGta 
Cr Fonder fie Gb 
Cr National 9U9SGb 
Denmark tl/W Go 
FarravlefSGb 
HaUtaxWGb 
HalHaxWGb 
Hal Hak 94 Gb 
HoflfaxMTVKh I 
KadtakHTlKll2 
IBM Gb 
Ireland 91Gb 
rekmdSiGb 
Loads Perm 96 Gb 
UavdsEuraWGb 
Midland Bk 01Gb 
MKkMkt BdtIQ] 
Mta Bk Den 96/99 Gb 
MM 10 Gb 
Not Provftdal 9*GtJ 
Nailonerida B/S 95 Ob 
NattamtaeBTOMGb 
Nationwide B/5 0096 
New leaked 97 Gb 
Prudential 95Gb 
RbsBSGb 
Sad 90793 Gb 
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lift 2384 WTO W.14 
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lift Z785 HOLMUnX* 
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lift 2784 1004510655 
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m 3*86 9612 W48 
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nrvf r i», , ~ 1 " ■ — Latm Nations 

»»***"* Rebuff VS 

%#ea^.that *be six noiiog . | t . n n T 1 Speaking is New Zealand, where JJ 

hgT itof scitarget zc©es for corren- I Dollar KatCS I he is attending a meeting JT\D Di 


INTERNATIONAL HERALD TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 25, 1987 

PEOPLE 


f y=dy\y>^ 




Page 15 


ad^ 

’otN 


iow xne six nation. 

I ^HWOII Dollar Kates * * attending a meeting of trade S\ JT\D W 

tfe nieetfx^ in' Paris on 1 a9 * l °* r.*. ^ flmristers, Mr. yeunersadhewas I Wfi, 1 1 / fl 

1 gyy * 1 ”** i are ug, unsure whether some of the trade 

£ a VZr Ki Jl n 

.Mr. Yentur tecribri «Udom 

rY?^^*^^^vwy qwet its .domestic economy and allow ilte twteSitrol of the 

!&*4££L 0f <hree weeks ’” eaacr maritei entry for American Inter-American Development 

° < “. „ SSXSIh&S’S Bank, the mulunanonil fiMncing 

■'TT?\Sn j “wra are no tar- Enropean and Amprir,. >!»)» v,». *— : ‘ . —a agency for development m Latm 


PMMlnMlB, 

*nm*>wo 

Surfll linn. 

Fraaditnac. 

Saur »-timhn 


Tin. 

Men. 

rare 

tarn 

lens 

urn 

M9J0 

159,17 

1J225 

rare' 

&M73 

iM as 


Speaking is New Zealand, where 
he is attcatding a meeting of trade 
ministers, Mr. Veunor sad he was 
unsure whether some of the trade 
issues disrupting U&Japanese re- 
lations would be resolved before 
the two countries open trade talks 
in late ApriL 


Sticht Unretires to Head RJR Nabisco Top VolckerAide 

Bv Arthur Hiebee I i aid G. Fisher, 58. the founder, who JottiS CoflSUhCEtlCy 


eminent to allow public entities to 


Bank, the multinadoaal ftnanri ng 
agency for development in Latin 


: O0eS^. 


^sSs 


-.4$ 22 roeetmg, Britain, 
f^n^Fnmc^ J apan, West Ger- 
cany end the United States were 

[ ^|pd&y.bcticved to have esinMWVi^ 
i or sp edfic upper and 

, j^hng .Ptnmdaries, for the 
^fcaicuiitncies. They also n g r,v> d 
. rat measures to eanse trade imhal- 
rames sdtd bettor coordinate eco- 
: noniic^x^des: 

■ ‘ Ufop p has yet to deliver on its 
pramfae of measures to stimulate 


asperatuwfwiih the Ja^^. ** - **»** 

enuneut,, were a major factor „ Officials said the plan involved a 

behind Mr. Baker’s statement. I m not sure we can wait until modification in voting power that 

“Baka-isnndern l®*c April," he said. would allow the United States only 

because of the protectiSsenfr A dealer for a West German ^UwDy less control than it had 
“Wat in Congress," Mis. McCaf- bank said, “The hill following the . . . . 

fay said, “and toe problems with Paris meeting is over. The market J^dispB to at to bank s annual 
Japan over semiconductors and never really lost its bearishness, but ^^“8 “« involves a Reagan ad- 
market access are continuing. He threat of concerted central P r °P° sal » 

could be using the dollar as a dob bank intervention was enough to ^ bank toward the na- 

to negotiate with.” hold rates steady for a time.” Oons that provide 95 percent of its 


late April," he said. would allow the United States only 

A dealer for a West German nargmafly less control than ii had 

bank said, -The hill following the . . . 

Paris meeting is over. The market The dupute at to bank s annual 


to negotiate with.” 
Remarks Tuesday 
trade representative, 


the U.S. 
tytan K. 


Yentter, reinforced that view. 


Id rate strad^or a timeY Jous that provide 95 percent of its 
. fi n anci al resources, but hold only 

“It’s surprising it took this long 46 percent of the voting shares, 
for the market to test the down- In return, Mr. Baker offered UB. 

side,” the dealer added. 


By Arthur Higbcc 

JntemtUrona} Herald Tribune 

In a surprise move, J. Paul Sticht, 
a former iugh executive -at RJ. 
Reynolds Industries, has come out 
of retiremeat to be named chair- 
man OT RJR Nabisco. 

The New York Times said same 
analysts saw tbe move as an at- 
tempt to smooth ruffled feathras 
among executives connected with 
RJ. Reynolds. Although Reynolds 
acquired Nabisco in 1985, Nabisco 
officials have moved decisively to 
positions of power. 

F. Ross Johnson, 55. who led 
Nabisco, has emerged as the No. 1 
man since the merger. At the first 
of the year, he replaced J. Tylee 
Wilson, also 55, as chief executive 
of RJR Nabisco. It was assumed 
that Mr. Johnson would add the 
title of chairman. Instead Mr. 
Sticht, 69, who retired in 1983 as 
cha pman and chief executive of 
RJ. Reynolds, win replace Mr. 
Wilson as chairman, if only for a 
year. The company requires all di- 
rectors to retire at 70. 

Logan Fenamec (UK) LtiL, the 


aid G. Fisher, 58. the founder, who 
To Our Readers remains chairman and chief execu- 

m ^ . live. The New York limes credits 

dMut^M^^dungesto. Gap one of the fastest-growing 
u Trik™ U -S- retailers, with more than 600 

g 0 "* p? *° 

92200 NedSy Cedex Republic stores specializing in kha 

France “ a PP arcL 

on The Uibv«sqf of Starting in 

Tdex 612-718 Scotland has named John R. Beau- 

Fax 4637-9370 moot to a new chair in applied 

management information systems. 
The professorship is funded by 
British subdivision of the US. con- ICL. the British computer manu- 
glomerate Figgie Internationa] facturcr. Mr. Bea nnvo ot, 29, now is 
Holdings Inc, has recruited Per joint managin g director of Pinpoint 


Dahlgren as managing director of Analysis m London, which ana- 
its Swedish materials-bandling Jyzes geographic and demographic 
subsidiary, Logan Transportteknik factorsmmarkemig.Heisafwmer 
AB of Ystad. Mr. Dahlgren, 41. lecturer in geography at Rede Um- 
prcvimisly was senior vice presi- versity in England. 
to^temar k.jmg.'Ko kMmAS. j j.. ^ t ^ Nw 

the Swedish shipbuilder. v . a . fT* r«.. n .iv 


M 7Ve» International 

Washington — Steven 
M. Roberts, chief assistant to 
Paul A VoJdcer, chairman of 
the Federal Reserve Board, will 
become a partner in Peal, Mar- 
wick, Mitchell & Co- 

Mr. Roberts, 42, will be 
based in Washington and will 
be responsible for strengthen- 
ing the accounting and consult- 
ing firm's consultancy practice 
in the field of financial institu- 
tion regulation. 

Mr. Roberts has been Mr. 
Votcker*5 assistant since 1983. 
Earlier, he was chief economist 
of the Senate Banking Commit- 
tee, then a vice president at 
American Express Co. 


The Gap fauu, tbe California- 
based casual clothing chain, has 
promoted Millard S. Drexler. 42, 
from executive vice president to 
president He takes over from Don- 


JJP. Morgan & Co. Inc. of New 

York and rts Morgan Guaranty firm of Debevoise & Plimpton 
Trust Co. subsidiary have recruited since 1976. He is a graduate of 
Michael E. Patterson as executive Harvard College and Columbia 
vice president general counsel University law school and was ooce 
for both. Mr. Patterson, 45, has a law cJa* to Justice Potter Stewart 
been a partner in the New York law of the UB. Supreme Court. 


I J beginning this year. The United 

*: •; John D. jBattersby . Interest rate margins on restrict- Africa and appeared to have been States is by far the bank's largest 
■ : ■ Ne» Turk Tima Service ^ debt would remain the wine as largely on Pretoria's terms. The ac- donor, providing 34 J percent of its 

JOHANNESElURG — South during the first interim agreement, cord is expected to be endorsed by capital 
Africa mid its major commercial ant f South Africa would continue South Africa’s other 299 creditors The Reagan administration had 
bank creditors have a grptri to es- 10 P 8 ^ interest on its foreign who account for the remaining 20 been seeking a veto on loans with 
[jfed far three years specific Emits debL percent of the short-term debt. the votes of only two of the bank’s 

m the country si repayments of $13 The agreemem with the coun- The agreeanent will be a step to- 12 executive directors, meaning a 
taSkm in foreign debt it froze last 34 mqar creditor banks, who ward normalization of Pretoria’s loan would need a 65 percent vote 

year; Finance Minister Barend du 80 paoeot erf the short-tann credit-worthiness, which has been from the IADB board for passage. 

Pfcsas said Tuesday. - debt, was reached at a meeting in severely damaged over the past two Latin American countries and 


as? 


In return. Mr Baker off erad U ^ rectors to retire at 70. irom executive vice president to iot com. Mr. ratteison. Das 1 ‘ 

support of a near-doubling of the Logan Fenamec (UK) LtiL, the president. He takes over from Don- been a partner in the New York law of the UB. Supreme Court. 

bank’s lending funds, provided by — — ■ ■ « ■— — 11 - — — ~* ** 

its 17 non-Latin donors, to about - ■ - T * , 

LHIN A: Beijing’s Bank Takes to Capitalism, but Not Without Taking Risks 


(Continued from tint finance page) 

drills in credit analysis. It was an 


position of authority in China — 
and last year became vice chairman 


inauspicious start The property of the overall Bank of China. 


bank creditors have agreed to es- 

e d -far three years spec&tc limits 
the coant^s repayments of $13 


market collapsed in 1982. along 
with much of Hong Kong's econo- 


Becanse Mr. Huang is often trav- 
eling, the daily management rests 


55 The new acmrri for s Tuesday by South Afri- years, first by the unilateral debt member countries outside the 

ilf 4 *® 1- hffiion in renavmentK will tact CB ' S ““mtittee coordinating the freeze and, last year, try official Western Hemisphere had proposed 
if-* SroSi w oo ^ portion of the total hints that South Africa might be a 60 percent approval level, where 

^i^ed to \a*& Wferch vhmh, foreign debt of around $24 billion, forced to renege on its foreign debt, three executive directors would be 
* • qne.agreed to last March whereby Pretoria froze its short-term for- ’ 0 ~* - •« • »~>" 




Aftira riciouH irate us snon-ierm i or- out me agreement, prooaoiy aw- 


But the agreement, probably aid- needed to block a loan. 

by the turn for the worse that the “We made a proposal this morn- 


j'PWafart 

wit 


T 


1^85* following the refusal of some Third Worid debt problem has tak- inj} which we think meets the re- China formed a Hong Kong and 

_ year- American banks to renew the ea in recent months, did not hold qttirement of their problem as well Macao regional office, which over- 

- J7ess«i said a down-pay- loans. South Africa also owes S10 out any immediate prospect of 38 meets the requirement of ours,” sees the sister banks and approves 

nratf os Opcrcera t of the short-term bfiBan in medium-tecn debt that South Africa's regaining access to Mr- Baker told reporters on Mon- large hwi; The sisters are 

debt, amounting to about $508 m3- was not affected by the standstill international capital markets, day following a luncheon meeting linked by computer, and clear 

vSr ^ ir4a “ e m die second and that will be repayable on the banking sources said. with officials from Brazil, Mexico, (becks among themselves, 

half of this yeaa% The Associated mnniritv /u* M ; n “We lva«-w that th» avnitnbu Argentina and other debtor coun- Mr. Hoang became chief execu- 


my, and there are indications that with Zhang Xueyao, a pipe-smok- 
many members of the banking ing, English-speakmg former diplo- 
group had substantia] losses. __ 

Court records show that severe! __ , _ , . 

of tbe banks had km heavily to the The oSUlk of C J l in a fel 

Kong’s second larges 

Apparently, the individual banks indications that its ba 
did not know that others in the 

group also had km to Carrian. To substantial and that t 
avoid such credit risks, the Bank of 


The Bank of China group also frauds of the job,” conceded Chen 
has picked up a great deal of com- Wen-jing, a senior executive of the 
mm ial business, but it is not dear Bank of China’s regional office. As 
how Ttnwdi or itii* is based on merit. ® result, he said, training programs 
Many of the group's business di- have been set up, attended by tbou- 


The Bank of Puna has become Hong 
Kong's second largest, but there are strong 
indications that its bad loans are 
substantial and that profitability is low. 


Mlf at tins The Associated maturity dates specified in the loan 
Press reported from Pretoria, a g T «<»mir lT « f 


“We believe that the available Argentina and other debtor coun- 
forejgn reserves of the Reserve tries. “They were not prepared to 


where the finance minister held a Mr. du Plessia said South Africa Bank, which increased by about accept today. 


tive of the regional office in late 
1985 and soon began to shuffle peo- 


prcss conference. Another $400 would also continue to rarny other $800 millicai dnring the past two Mr. Baker added: “It’s off the pie into retirement. As the previous 

.._jjpuji°B paymeiwt, or 3J percait, dd>t that fdl outside the payment months, and the expected con tin- table now. Pm not going to leave it bead of the Bank of China’s iniema- 

,ywouid be mad e , during 1988; $346 freeze, such as owed to the ued surplus on the current account h a n g in g^ out there.” He said the tional division in Beijin g. Mr. 

ntillkm, or 3 percent, during 1989, International Monetary Fund. of the balance of payments, will be offer might be made again at a Huang appears to be highly regarri- 


and a repayment of $166 nriflton 
(fining the first Isalf of 1990.] 


Banking sources said that the . sufficient to meet these commit- meeting (rf worid finance ministers ed in tbe Communist hierarchy. He 


agreement was favorable to South meats,” Mr. du Plessia said. 


in Washington in two weeks. 


is still in his mid-50s — young for a 


mat who previously headed the 
Bank of China operation in New 
York. Mr. Zhang , and to a lesser 
extent Mr. Huang, are playing a 
more active role in the H anlnng 
cocktail circuit than their predeces- 
sors. but neither speaks Cantonese, 
the dialect prevalent in Hong Kong. 

This has been no obstacle to 
growth, however, particularly 
among working-class and middle- 
class families, who are attracted by 
a good branch network and excel- 
lent mortgage terms. 


ents are of the 3,000 companies sands of employees, 
from China that have opened of- Nevertheless, there are strong in- 
dications that bad loans are sub- 
stantial and that profitability is 
S bcCODlC BOM low. The problem in making such 

. .1 - . assessments, however, is that the 

? but there are Strong group's financial reports are 
1 loans are sketchy and, with the exception of 

“ ^ those of the four sister banks regis- 

rofitability is low. tered in Hong Kong, are unaudited 

J by outside accounting firms. 

— — - — » Even by their official earnings 

fices in Hong Kong in tbe last half- statements, the profits of many of 
dozen years. Many others appear to the group’s banks have fallen in the 
be corporations, mostly based in last few years, after adjusting for a 
Hong Kong, that think it is good devalued Chinese currency. One 
politics to maintain at feast one fairly typical member of the group, 
account at the Bank of China. for example, the Bank of Commu- 
The group's staff has doubled ideations, reported a $25 J million 
cinr* ] 979 , to 11,000, but reported- profit in 1983, but just $14.9 mil- 
ly there have been tensions between lion in 1985, the most recent year 
recent university graduates and the for which figures are available, 
less-educated middle managers The 1985 profit amounted to just 
theywork under. a 6.9 percent return on capital, 

‘There is a gap between the abil- compared with 17.8 percent at the 
ities of the employees and the de- independent Bank of East Asia. 


** a 
ws&fe 

'-SCfc 
z i ‘feeti 

^&r- 

■ Tan*. 


luesday’s 


n Month 
High Low Stock 


Stfula Nat 

Dfv. YWL 11Kb HW Low 4 PAL OiVb 


It* MW 16H — U 
V 3*1* 3116— V> 


12MOMb 
High Low stock 


Seloiln Not 

Wv. YfeL ISk HM L on * PM. CftW 


12Montti 
High Low Slack 

17 Wfc Jotwi A 
38*v 71Vi Juno 
20 Ik 12*h Justin 


Solon In Net 

Ofr.VM. KBt Kfrfl LOW JPJS.CH W 

.Uo 97 IS MM liVl — Vi 

10 3V 38K 39 + W 

AO IS II 18U> M M 


12 Month 
Won Oh. Stock 


StoMln Net 

inn Hton Law 4RAtaiv 


12 Month 
HWlLSW Slock 


Soles In Net 

Dfv. yia. 10*1 Mhto Low 4 RM. OtW 


44 13 Oracle 576 

13% Iffi* Orttll 134 

*3 37V> OshBA U 1 M 

33 20 Hi OstifcT B JO 1J} 100 

J7» OttrTP 2.92 6D 131 

22 Vh 13W. OwatlMll J2 1A 364 


414k 3V 40 — IV 

io% WA imv 
M 82 *4 +1 

J0H. 30L, 301k 
«7lk 47% 4746 + ^1 
20A 104k 20M— tb 


17% I1W 

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Ufa 10U. 
751k 2216 
7W 19k 
130 111H» 

am > 

Ufa ZVk 
33to 2m 
464k 2ZK 

• Oh 

40A MVS 
10Vk M* 
2ns iivk 
31VS 20 VS 
Iffa *%k 

2m ns 
2» 18 
Ufa 12 
28W 14 
25VJ 149h 

MW avs 
lsw aw 

20W 5W 
39 M 
4JW 2 ffH 
2* 13 

25 Vi 15,. 

n m 

19*6 


TCF 
TS Ind 
TSO 
Tandem 
Tcmdon 

Tecum 3J0a ! 
Tefcnwd 
Telco 
TIcmAs 
TICmwt 
To! Plus 
Tttard* M 
Tetobc 

Tel non s ail 
Tennant . JM 
Thrmd S 
3Com 
TopMkt 
TrakAu 
TrnMus 
Tmwck 
TrISIar 
Trloasv 
T rimed t 

TrusJo to 
TsrtCP 128 
TuesMm 
2CCnlns J2 
TvcoTy 
Tnwt M 


16W 16W 16VS— Vs 

26 25W 25V. + Vk 

14VS 14U 14V» + <4 

73 6934 7134 — Tk 

6W 5 5*k— Ufa 

12* 127 127 
IWt 15W 16V4 + W 
4W 4Va 4VS 
32W 31W 32 +W 
44 4ZVS 44 
614 4 614 4- Vk 

41W 39 41 '4 +J14 

1634 16 1614 + 3k 

23W 22W 22 A— 3k 
32 3034 3134 + W 

17Y4 1634 163k— Ik 
2134 21 21W— W 

2334 23W 233k 
1434 1AV 343k + Vk 

27 Z7 27 — W 

18 173fc 173fc + \k 

Ufa llfa UMl— W 
14 Ufa M + W 
173k 16W 1634 — W 
3814 373k 38 +14 

3434 341k 3434 3- 14 
183k 18, 18 —1 
2214 2134 22 — Vk 
1BW 99k 10 — Vk 
3334 33 33 — W 
















































Page 16 





INTERNATIONAL HERALD TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 25 T 1987 



PEANUTS 

( OKAY, HERE we 60. 
THE FIRST PITCH OF 
v THE SEASON... . 


FOR ME, THIS IS THE 
MOST EXCITIH6 MOMENT 
OF THE YEAR... ? 


Is ?ow/i 


r uiHY,I I70 nV 
c KNOW.. J 


BLONDIE 

WHENEVER VN3HOCK? 
l£> ON A BUSINESS r- 
■TO1P I 
GAIN TEN 
POUNDS 


Na- 


HOWEVER... 


IP NOU'RE SONG TO BE f 
THE HEAD } 
1 f&STn OP THIS \ 
HOUSEHOLD f. 


...YOU'VE GOT TO GO 
Al_i_ THE WW /—T* 


ACROSS 

I Booted 
5 Census figs. 

10 But, to Juan 

14 TV starter 

15 Deloulor 
hageen 

16 hygiene 

17 Seed covering 

IS Scene in "Quo 

Vadis?" 

19 Clothes chaser 

20 New Orleans 
mecca 

23 Kind or heat 

24 Medical suffix 

25 Staffs 

28 Title of respect 

30 Start of a 
Dickens title 

34 Mine product 

35 Jorge or Jose 

36 Catches 

37 Atlanta mecca 

41 ABrokawrival 

42 Friendly touch 

43 Item in Ali's 
rec. 

44 Pale 

45 Old Siamese 
coin 

46 Suckling's 
forte 

48 Business-letter 
abbr. 

50 Houston or 
Browne 


51 Windy City 
mecca 

57 Be solicitous 

58 Spooky 

59 Placed 

61 Prefix with 
body 

62 Quick 

63 Early 
domestic 

64 Take five 

65 Harmony 
part 

66 One of the ages 


1 RRstop 

2 Jacob's ladder, 

e-g- 

3 Vaudeville 
entr'acte 

4 Reason for 
Ham's lam 

5 Strikebreakers 

6 Tropical plant 

7 Hemsley TV 
vehicle 

8 Muscle that 
stretches 

9 Shortstop 
Marion's 
nickname 

10 Mariner's 
guide 

11 One of five 
"Greats” 

12 Carry on 


13 Cheer in 
Toledo 

21 Ethiopian title 

22 Laughing 

25 Dried coconut 
meat 

26 Neighborhoods 

27 Under, to 
Bryant 

28 Patriotic org. 

29 Awkward 

31 Valor or virtue 

32 Onions' 
cousins 

33 1 am, to Pedro 

35 Riv. boat 

36 Fast plane 

38 ” , the 

cops!” 

39 Hair rinse 

40 "The pig was 

45 Cire 

46 Stock-market 
word 

47 Fluffy fare 

49 Rope fastener 

50 Guide 

51 Strip on a track 

52 Beaux 

53 Shamrock land 

54 Spot for a 
missile 

55 Simplicity 

56 Prong 

57 Cord or 
Javelin 

60 Haunt 


BEETLE BAILEY 

THIS HUMIDITY. 7 

I CAN'T (TO A , 

THIN© WITH 

fM HAIR/ Sf (\ II 


ME ARE Yfc>U 

either KIPPIN© ME? 


you're Nor 

KIPP1N& 


ANDY CAPP 





.„mebbe7t 
>NOU*RE< feS-1 
RIGHT —J H I 


t r~ V * 


© New York Timm, edited by Eugene Mtdesko. 

DENNIS THE MENACE 


WIZARD of ID 


tVt 



6000T&, 15,4 

mm? / !zi 



[• 1|B 


REX MORGAN 

THANK YOU FOR LUMCf 
DAVIDSON — BUT IT M 
11 



efh *- 


BY THE WAV, 
WHAT TIME i 
IS you* * 
FLIGHT* MAY 
I DRIVE YOU 
TO THE , 
AIRPORT? i 


'■s.-r-i ■ a '' * iMrso^rAw-dSrvJcii* *rc 


IV LIKE TO SXfiyj 
OVER AND BE / 
AVAILABLE TO Z 
ANSWER ANY ^ 
QUESTIONS YOUR 

technical staff/ 

MAY HAVE AT / 
YOUR MEETING ^ 
THIS afternoon/ 


FRANKLY, I'M ANKfOUS 
TO GET YOUR 
BUSINESS / 


"She THINKS 5HEfe so smart, but she canV tell 

THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN A DOODLEBUG AN 1 A 
CAT0tyUAR.f 


GARFIELD 


THAT SCRAMBLED WORD QAME 
• by Henri Arnold and Bob Lee 


HAW/ HAW/ HAW' 


Unscramble tfiesa lour Jumbles, 
one letter to oach square, to form 
taw onfinary words. 


KNACS 


CLAYKE 


FRAMOT 


WHAT SHE CALLED 
HIM WHEN HE 
WELSH EP ON HIS 
PROMISE TO BUY 
HER A NEW MINK 


Now arrange the circled letters to 
form the surprise answer, as sug- 
gested by the above cartoon. 


World Stock Markets 

Via Agence France- Presse Mooch 24 

Closing prices in local currencies unless cihermse indicated. 


Yesterday's 


FYfnt answer here: UU U U 

(Answers tomorrow) 

Jumbles: EXACT FLAME MOSAIC HARROW 
Answer. What do ghosts eat tor breakfast? — 


I OF WHEAT 


WEATHER 


)H 

F 

LOW 
C F 


63 

10 

50 

P 

46 

6 

43 

O 

63 

7 

45 

d 

63 

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3 

39 

r 

50 

10 

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— — 


mm- 

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54 

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32 

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32 

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66 

6 

43 

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41 

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43 

1 

34 

0 

61 

1 

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d 

40 

7 

45 

r 

57 

2 

36 

0 

34 

0 

32 

iw 

70 

15 

59 

d 

57 

13 

55 

r 

54 

B 

46 

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59 

7 

45 

0 

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1 

34 

d 

34 

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26 

0 

52 

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43 

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sw 

55 

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0 

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1 

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0 

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34 

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HIGH 

C 

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36 

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1 

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26 

79 

34 

93 

31 

88 

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48 

12 

54 

33 

71 

22 

72 

20 

68 

22 

72 

25 

77 

19 

66 

29 

84 

32 

90 

31 

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63 


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77 

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63 

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34 

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41 

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45 

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63 

fr 

82 

a 

55 

cl 

45 

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68 

s> 

73 

a 

60 

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75 

fr 

30 

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41 

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70 

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SA Brew* 
St Helena 
Sosoi 
weikam 


1BOO 1773 
4300 £000 
10*5 1050 
3375 3200 


Composite Stock Index; 2MM0 


Commerzbank M 
pmlui: I67U0 


AMP-CBSCeol Index : : 
Pi w i wn : 27&ia 


Fraafetart 


| rnfcnn-r 

tWi 

sJ 

AECI 

1700 

1635 


6730 

6625 


2125 

3073 


2150 

2150 

Buffets 

7800 

7400 

GF5A 

5000 

5700 


4150 

4023 

HlveW Steel 

530 

540 

Kloof 

3350 

.IMP 

(tod bonk 

780 

(WO 

Rujwfat 

4550 

4475 


Stoehlwfaa 


ASnmwrklH lima : 7*240 
Previous : 7SCM 


ACl 
ANZ 
BHR 

Bougainville 
SIS £29! Colee Myer 
3810 3892 I coma ICO 

ins isss I cKa 

CSH 
Dunlop 
Elders lid 
ICI Australia 

Magellan 

MIM 

Nat Mist Bonk 
News Cana 
N Broken Hill 
Poseidon 
Old Cool True! 
Santos 

Thomas Notion 
western Mining 
Westpae Banking 
Woo ds ! do 


1490 1643 

2925 2920 


AsaM Chemical 

Asahi Gtas» 

Bank of Tokyo 

Bridgesto n e 

Canon 

Cade 

Clioh 

Dot Nippon Print 
□a two House 


4 1M 
SM SM 
VU5 MM 
ATS AM 
3.10 3 

SM 634 
2J0 IS5 
6.74 6 M 

IBS 193 
U0 445 
SM 5.10 
U0 3JB 
145 1J5 

2J6 332 

SM 5M 
TUB 2230 
245 2M 
9 JO 9 40 
IJ7 07 
4SB 450 
470 4S» 

7 JO 7.10 
474 473 
3M 2 M 


430 439 

tar 07 
1400 1470 
1430 1400 
7SS 776 
Ml MO 
1150 1190 
828 840 
1790 1040 
1890 1890 



HOLD ON, MR. PRESIDENT 


By Sm Donaldson. 260 pages. $17.95. 
Random House, 201 East 50th Street, New 
York, N. Y. 10022. 

Reviewed by Jane Lestvy . . 

I AM GLAD there is a Sam Donaldson. I 
urn glad there is someone willing to stand 
out cm the lawn of the White House and burl 
pointed, nwpnKrin questions into the dm of a 
helicopter rotor at a president who, as Donald- 
san teDs it, is both hard of hearing and selective 
in his bearing. 

Fm convinced that the United States is a 
better, safer place thanks to Donaldson's per- 
sistent impertinence. 

I am not so glad he decided to chronicle all 
his adventures. “Hold On, Mr. President” tells 
you everything you’d ever want to know about 
Sam Donaldson and a whole lot more. 

He sounds Hke a beD of guy. He makes Ms 
own bed. And in the days after the breakup of 
his second marriage he learned how to grow 
roses and to keep fresh Dowers in the house 
every day. He even kept the apartment dean 
without any help. 

While these revelations may soothe those 
ABC television viewers who fhmlc abrasive is 
Donaldson's middle nanm , they do not make 
for great literature. Or great hwtrwiTi insight. 
Television measures time in “air bites” — 
those snappy morsds of information, “Killer 
Bees Head North — more at 11.” What we 
have here is 255 pages of air biles, tantalizing 
tidbits of this and that, d***" kills and gaffes, 
anecdote and analysis. Tike Donaldson’s ca- 
reer, the book is all over the place. 

Obviously, there are thoughtful, probing 
books to be written about covering the presi- 
dency, about «fta gft-man«gin£ the news, about 
ethics in journalism, about phrasing questions 
that demand an answer — and Donaldson 
touches on all these, but that’s alL And that’s 
too bad because Donaldson is at Ms best when 
he resembles the reporter you see an the air, the 
one named Best Television Correspondent by 
the Washington Journalism Review. 

A seasoned Washington pdSdcal importer 
once said, “If there was no television, Donald- 
son would go door to door.” ’Dying top hard 
pays off in rep or t in g but not necessarily ini 
humor. Take ms account erf the day he worked 
as pool reporter during the first Reagan-Gor- 


Sofatioa to Previous Puzzle 


QE3QE3 lUGHHE EBGQ 
DEED □□BOG □□□□ 
BLED QBOGO OQQB 
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IEEE □3E3QE E3E3BD 
to DO ODEHO □HEBE 

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H2EGQ □□□□□ □□□□ 
EUBE □□□□ OEOG 


BOOKS_^_-— 

r sisasSSSS?' 

answer to Donaldson s q I . ^ « *vfr. Generat 

SUSS, auradon to * c S ?^ drei (3romyko 

****$:. nice : ™l« tojr mm J 


ha ’* «pM«- “A» 

now. m 

^a»^ssa-rs 

j^UwaonrheMS'in* 

Post. 

REST SELJ .ERS ^ 

- k ■ 2JXX3 twotocre s 

This fo! u-> ^ Waki m lia « «H 0 x 0 x 0 % 

throu aboBt ite Umual Stua 

ConSCniU>6 


FICTION 


La Weds 
WtottoUB 


, WINDMILLS OF THE 00 , 

; HSfereOF ^ SScS 5 ? 2 

*, ■) 

6 NIGHT OF THE FOX. by Jack BSggiM S 

l o 

9 ?HE PANIC OF -89. by JintoAn ...» 6 

I? !0 

it SiBasaggggg 12 

14 dMAMS ARE NOT BWUG H. by Jbc- 

nuclinc Briskin 

15 THE DINNER PARTY, by Ho want Fasi 13 

NONFICTION 

1 A SEASON ON THE BRINK, by John 

Fcmstdo — — [ 

1 COMMUNION, by Wbiiky Slocber 3 

3 THE FITZGERALDS AND THE REN- 

NEDYS. bv Doris Keanu Goodwn 2 

4 FATHERHOOD. by BiD Cosby 4 

3 ECHOES IN THE DARKNESS, by Jo- 


Fortl with Chris Chase 

i INTIMATE PARTNERS, try Maggte 
Scarf 11 

9 A DAY IN THE LIFE OF /VMERICA. 

(Coffins Publishers) 7 

10 YLHTRE ONLY OLD ONCE! by Dr. 

IScusi , , - I- S 

11 THE SEARCH FOR. SIGNS OF INTEL- 

LIGENT LIFE IN THE UNT VERSE, by 
Jane Wagner ; 9 

12 THE RECKONING, by Dev id Halber- 

■tam : 14 

□ LIFE WISH, by Ell Wand »2 

14 BOONE, by T. Boone Pickens 

13 REAGAN’S AMERICA: Inxsocenu ai 

Home, by Gsny W3b - — : 10 

ADVICE. HOW-TO AND Ml&CaXANEOUS 

1 MEN WHO HATE WOMEN! & THE 

WOMEN WHO LOVE THEM; by Susan 
Fnnw u d and loan Tone* - i 

2 THE FRUGAL GOURMET . COOKS . 

WITH WINE, by Jett Srith ; 2 

3 THE ROTATTON MET. by M. earn' Ka- 

• lahn -J L 1: — : 3 

4 WEBSTER’S NINTH NEW COLLE- 

GIATE DICTIONARY. (Mariam- Web- 
«er) - , — — .J 4 

5 THE FRUGAL GOURMET, by Jeff 

Smith — — 3 


By Alan Truscoct 

T HE diagnuned deal was 
perhaps the most spectacu- 
lar played March 11 in the sec- 
ond-round of die American 
Contract Bridge League's 
Spring Nationals and left the 
players stra gg ling to calculate 
the score. Larry Cohen of Lit- 
tle Falls, New Jersey, sitting 
South, brushed aside East's 
(me no-trump intervention, a 
bizarre attempt to show length 
in the major suits, and jumped 
to three no-trump. 

West doubled firmly, and 
both opponents unwisely 
stood their ground when 
North redoubled. The opening 
heart lead was won with the 
queen and a diamond finesse 


succeeded. South entered his 
hand with a spade lead and . 
repealed the' diamo nd finesse. 
He then led a dub to the long, 
losing to the ace. Another 
heart lead drove out the ace; 
but South had 11 tricks in the 
bag. Spade leads eventually 
squeezed West in the minor 
suits, and South emerged with 
three redoubled overtricks. To 
avoid the brain strain involved 
in calculating, they consulted 
the back of the bidding-box 
card and found that the score 
was 1350. 

In the replay, North-South 
bid aggressively to six dia- 
monds. Ibis weald succeed on 
a good day, but the defense ' 
began with a dub ruff and 
West still had to score a tramp 


trick for dowri two. Cohen’s 
team gained 16 points on the 
transaction. 


WEST 

«J 

9K742 

0K874 

+AI09-4 


NORTH A 

*QU1B4 

«AQ J 1093 
*J5i: 

111 ■ pf» 

41 

SOUTH (D) 

4AK S 
OAQ5 
495 

4EQ 873 


fi« and West ware vulnerable. 
The bidding: 

Sob* Wbst North East' 

1* Pass 10 IN.T. 

■3 NX DU. RedU. Pass 

Pass Pass 

West led the beari ng 


March 23 




Spar Aero r 

SMeoA 


BomtardrA 


®3?Mnt7rKf 







































- - 




INTERNATIONAL HERALD TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 25, 1987 


SPORTS 



<¥* 





- ■■ •• . 

^ F: , r^ faUfaatfenal Herald Tribune 

V • - 1£H I ®0N -— A pacemaker fen 
P . f • : ^iHeteatwaya used to be some- 


I* ' . — — 4ML. 

f s yoinwiTOuestone. No 
!; “■ tte'lflMtntgg. the sdencc, is champ. 
i pig, apace. Stacfdenfy profession*] 
human as the jesl 


^ ' | .- S dctrr i o -JEpgland is played tc 

4.. d^'luinJA of physical exertion, yet 
^ f j Kcnny SaPsom, the country’s inter- 
\ % ‘ ^badk, competes in 

| Rob Hughes 

i n^ida^ML Of hereditary heart 

^ ];■- *. younger En glish 




VANTAGE POINT/ John Feinstein 

When 8 Is Nothing, 4 Approaches Infinity 

WaMngum Pait Strvict and players and coaches who arc poiniguard Kenny Smith, on the lo lose, you as vvdl lose in the 

WASHINGTON — It was Billy within a free throw (LSU) or a bad ksingade for the second time in his round of 16 becansenoone r® 1 ™" 
Packer who made the comment pass (Iowa) of the final Four but second regional final last Saturday, bets anything jou^g done unless 
Sunday during the final moments don't get there? How many people “Oneof my goals was to play in the you gpt to the Final Four, 
of the Indiana-Louisiana State remember last year's losing region- final Four. Now, that’s gone.” Pittsburgh Coach Paul Evans, 


Midwest Regional final. As Fess al finalists? (Navy, Kentucky, After his team beat Florida is the who took Navy to the final eight a 

Irvin stepped to the foul line with - - - year ago before losing to Duke, 

LSU leading, 76-75. and 26 seconds ^ ,, , , - , . remembers the postgame feeung. 

left. Packer said, 'This is why the Dean smith, North Carolina S coacn, used to Claim “We got hammered, so there wasn’t 

that getting to the find Four was harder than 

^**8 the tWe. Just reaching the Final Foot ft-; PSJSSPS. 
throws, Indiana would have needed makes a team, its coaches and its players winners. &»'t taw* when you'd get 

a three- perim field goal to tie; h»d 7 *- J th» wr like that when you re just 

LSU hdd on to win, it would have And it ffOCS beyond that. one good game away.** 

been worth an additional 5200,000 _ J — - - Or one shot away. “If you get to 

North Cantina SlUft Auburn* ^Thursday, SyMMC ^“SSSS'^SSS 

between being a repoiul finulist *W * ..jost to .»* >«* he Oo^ eeogj^ SmiU, wbo won hi, firs, ^rven.™- 




(worth about 5800,000) and going w»y themes mil fl fee tongue. 


to the Final Four. 


“Final Eight" jost doesn’t make it to win. Then he said 

tk. ««.. “c: __1 r...." J. u Penwmlur ifvni At 


from behind 
ie told them: 


a surgically 


Ddctds are peculating on all 
’■4 -. manner of previously disabled ath- 
* fctesrcachmg the kd$n& thnnlrc to 



gjonal finals but has lost his last 
three. “If you get to the regional 




ssaaahn 


asofKai 

haa ^ 


£• ’ ^ pew: types of pacemaker 
■ X- r IW* ff^ater- flexifaiHty Professor 
I- '/tytsotml Jtifian of the British Heart 
f < fipwwfatwn told The Times of Loo-. 
' dap. “They are now rate-responsive 
they ssn accelerate with an in- 
ai»seiu body movement, I see no 
reaswik why in principle an athlete 
V 'with a: pamsAer should. not oom- 
: pete ^Olympic standards." 
Bcfpre.weaO rush out for our fit, 
£ h stooW be pointed out that alhkt- 
' : fejripwess is:a prerequisite. Head 
lr . cases outnumber affairs of the 
heart in soccer, but the struggle to 
. cranpete against cardiac defects is 
no more a hnrdle than the willing- 
... ncsstopnbfidze the facts. - 
f . rWc have still to shed coyness 
beforeaccepting that defects, more 
apparattwfth: new screeomg appa- 
: QtuS, heed not force sedmtary ex- 
4^tences on the naturafly athletic 
! :.\7 Thirteen years ago a dynamic 
r. 1 fitfle'Sbot, Asa Hartford, was de- 
siedA transfer to the then-mighty 
Ueds United because a scan de- 
tected a pinprick “hole” in his 
heaoi 

Leeds couldn’t risk such a gam- 
bfe Hartford subsequently played 
for West Bromwich, Manchester 
Gty : Nottingham Forest and Ever- 
ton m 55? league matches, scoring, 
every tenth game. He nm with ter- 
riafflccpersateiice thiou^i 70inter- 
natiooafe for Scotland. Heriroj^xd 
out of top-class soccer at the age ctf 
34 through nonnaf wear and tear. ' 
Yet wfcfie HaztioFd way still rust- 


. Tory Wh^m»A«Coa*dPr«, 

AxsataTs KemySansotn, center, daetmgra to hany Wayne Fereday of the Queerfs Park Ranges. 


ning, British athletics was refusing 
to allow Linda Peck, a promising 
schoolgirl, to fulfil] her potential on 
the track. A leaking heart valve (no 
bar to Ron Qaike, the superb Aus- 
tralian runner, and no bar to Peck’s 
medical advisers) struck terror in 
Officials’ mind g 

At that time, too, cardiac re- 
searchers produced papers on a top 
English soccer player who, for five 
years, performed untroubled fay ir- 
regular ECG readings. The player’s 
anonymity was respected — and 
still is — by doctors who knew Ms 
livdiliood would be imdermined by 
publicity, never mind by presump- 
tive diagnosis. 

Perhaps -the real measure ctf 
change is in attitude as as 
instrumentation; Michel Van trot is 
one of France's, one the worid’s, 
senior referees despite having been 
confined to bed until Ms late teens 
with a heart condition. 

The condition has not gone 
away; fear has.. Discussing his case, 
a Parisian heart specialist told me: 
“It doesn't mean to say he came 
back from beH In the fifties, we 
were very very prudent. We put 
people with a heart munmir to rest. 
The most interesting thing is not 
that [Vamrot’sj body vanquished 
the malady, but that his mmd (fid 
so. The ideology of Ms medicine is 
now obsolete, but being put to bed 
ought to have suggested to him a 
future as a dak or a hank idler 


CourtJRejects Players 9 Appeal 
ForBigger Cut of TV Profits 


K * ' ' 'TkeAaadirted Pros 

fe WASHINGTON — The Su- 
t'Cvhrenje Oiurt cm Monday rqected 
^ ' ^m'^calby major league baseball 
scekmg the legal right to 
% dollars in revenue 

h^pjm^evised^ames. 

m a one-paragraph 
> i^™S|ecTet stand, a rufine of last 
t : ^^^w hy: the 7th UK CSromt 

oi^m have a 
^ Ere q^aghi on die tetecaste. 

K League Baseball Hay- 

C ^Assoriaticgi sca the players were 
Pi rnlukdjbesed on state laws protect- 

fc-m, to 

K_ Bof the 7(h Circuit court said 
Irilaal^cxHyvriEht law preempts 
Aose state laws. It added that the 
# dapsteoter TV revenue was best 
M tlte bargaining table rather 
ijK: feanfte courts. 

^^^p&y^^eek-a. judiciai deo- 
fuK>-^iatiQn that they possess a 
^^rigfaL. . they opuld not procure in 
^^I’^airiiug wife the date,” the ap- 
court said. Its rufing does hot 
pve &e^hd» “perpetnal rights to 
[ jdayexs* perform ances. The 

^ ^T^tejrmain free to attain their 
Lw^.-d^ictivtf fay bargaining," the ap- 
\^J:peafex»»Ht said. - . 

v , Total tdeviskm revenues from 
~i z feidafl were estimated in 1985 to 
' ^7: jiddiamc than $1.1 billion over a 
! .Yfrv period. 

IK- TT» team owners have agreed in 
ite: past to devote about one-third 


of the revexme from nationally tele- 
vised broadcasts to the players’ 
pension fund. But those, agree- 
ments did not include the millions 
generated by local telecasts and ca- 
ble TY coverage. 


leering individual creativity from 
being reproditeed without compen- 
sation, the appeals court said. It 
added that the televising ctf a spots 
event demands sufficient creativity 
— the selection ctf camera angles 
and use of instant replays, for ex- 
ample — to be covered by copy- 
right law. 

The players argued that their 
performances were not covered by 
copyright protection because they 
lade sufficient artistic merit. But 
the appeals court said that “only a 
modic um ®f creativity is ieqnired 
fear a work to be copyrightable, 
players’ performances possess the 
modest creativity required for co- 
pyrightability" 

Unions representing players 
from professional football, basket- 
bafl, hockey and indoor soccer 
joined in urging the Supreme Court 
to overrule the appeals court. , 

“The copyright law’s require- 
ment of ‘creative, intellectual or 
aesthetic labor* is dearly not met 
by the evanescent performance of 
an athlete in a sporting event — 
whether it is Dwight Gooden firing 
a fastball or Walter Payton running 
off tackle for a touchdown,” the 
MLPA argued- 


U.S. High School Following 
Pros’ Pie-in-the-Sky Recipe 


Hew York Tim* Sendee 


'1** if NEW YORK-eallit tridde-down 

■’ „ taoiry sty bores that area standard feature of pro stadiums nave now 

^ Sun YaBey, noth of Los 

bc&ved toTtbe ^ 

■. The private achooTs new gymnasmeo, coatplmun ^ wil uas 

% carpeted enclosed gym, the boxes 

padded seats. Nestled side by ode at plants 

i 


r^toSas. u*o would be 
boxes would prove basketball and 

anteod preferred seating at And unlike big-time 

4Ut games to schod ylsys and wn^Ana ^ & ^ Bt> 

wms, which generally tea** Q^tian allows the 

that can exceed $50,000 a SS OT a luxury location 

ixtdividual.seais, making a splurge on 

eafftudable. it mav be a while before the 

id, i$ the early ospenence is anygoida-^ it may oe 


and no physical activity. His men- 
tal triumph is extraorduiaiy.” 

Hxtraordmaiy too is the victory 
of rnfnri over doubt in the men and 
women who compete in the Trans- 
plant Olympics. So, of course, is 
that of 50 men who began a Trans- 
plant Trophy for five-a-side soccer 
in Britain three years ago- Nine 
teams ctf kidney transplants vied 
with one representing Pap worth 
Hospital, which specializes in heart 
ailments. 

A greater menial challenge is to 
compete on equal terms wlrae bod- 
ies are tuned to abnormal stresses. 
Sansom and Hemming are in the 
forefront rtf that. 

Sansom has fought the devil of 
an addiction to gambling. He 
sometimes had to move; to stay 
solvent, he sometimes had to sell 
Ms story of shameful squander. 

But he chose only last month to 
put into perspective his innermost 
worry. “I have played through two 

Worid Cups, more than 70 En gland 

a ppear an ces and over 500 League 
and Cup games with a heart prob- 
lem,” he revealed. 

Apparently the Sansoms have 
narrow arteries and thick blood. An 
unde died prematurely, his father 
has a pacemaker, his brother had 
bypass surgery at 32. 

*T imow HI need a bypass opera- 
tion before the age of 50,” Sansom 
says. So ter, dtUgeni dieting, no 
smoking and moderate drinking 


have staved that off. Sansom, 28, is 
looking for one more World Cup. 

But Hemming, just 20 and the 
father of two, has no fame to cush- 
ion the doubts his heart trouble 
could raise in the minds of prospec- 
tive managers. 

We hardly had heard of him un- 
til, last weekend, his Second Divi- 
sion dub, Stoke Gty, decided to 
publicly ask its supporters to give 
the redhead a break and stop 
booing him. 

“His name has met with a bad 
reaction lately," says Mick Mills, 
the team’s manager. “I only hope 
the crowd will now be more sympa- 
thetic and supportive." 

Mills, who complained in Ms 
own recent playing prime about the 
obsessive pace of English soccer, 
admits he wrestled with the dilem- 
ma of speaking out about Hem- 

ming ’s plight 

The youngster, otherwise excel- 
lently endowed at 5-foot-l 1 and 
156 pounds (1.80 meters, 70.7 kilo- 
grams), suffered for two years 
through breathlessness, ax first di- 
agnosed as a virus. Last summer be 
underwent three hours of surgery 
to fit a coin-size pacemaker to 
speed up Ms heartbeat 

He is now an experiment — a 
guinea pig shared by sport and sci- 
ence. And if he succeeds, he will 
help disperse some outmoded over- 
protectiveness toward sport as ’seen 
through gi*M- 


do with any thoughts about money. 
It had to do with the aura that 
surrounds the Final Four and the 
pressure (hat players and coaches 
in a regional final fed. 

“In 1985 when we were playing 
St John’s in the West Regional 
final, we had the lead with 12 min- 
utes left" said North Carolina 
State's coach, Jim Valvano. “I 
wanted to get a time-out right then 
just so I could point to the score- 
board and say to the kids, ‘Now 
look, we're exactly 12 minutes from 
the goal we set at the be ginnin g of 
the season. Twelve minutes from 
the Final Four.' ” 

College basketball is rare is that 
few teams start out the season with 
the national title as their goal Most 
players and coaches will teO you 
the goal is to get to the Final Four. 

In no other sport does a quarterfi- 
nal gam* — which is what the re- 
gional finals are — mean so mirrh 
In no other sport do you cut down a 
net for reaching the agnrifhruih. 

This Is not to say that reaching the 
Final Four is somehow better than 
winning the national champ io nshi p, 
although Dean Smith, North Caroli- 
na's coach, used to tiaim that get- 
ting to the Final Four was harder 
than winning the title. Just reaching 
the Final Four makes a team, its 
coaches and its players winners. 

And it goes beyond that. History 
shows that admission applications 
at schools that make the Final Four 
go up the next year because of the 
exposure associated with the week- 
old extravaganza. Applications to 
the summer camps run by Final 
Four coaches inevitably go up, as do 
their dime fees, speaking fees and 
shoe contracts. The players get the 
glory and exposure to pro scoots, 
and they take home memories. 

Bui what happens to the teams 


Irvin's miss — a brick off ibe the way “Final Four” does. “Ranmiber, if you don't wmSatur- fma] ^ ^^se; people justsay, 

from rim -probably had Httle to 7° ^ Tf iSeiddSt 

do With anvthou»hti. about money, make u hurts,” said North Carohna doesn tmeanathmg. Ifyouregomg 




Getting a Leg Up 

New Jersey’s Joe GreUa resorted to unorthodox defensive 
tarnics in trying to stop Esa Tikkanen shortly after the Oiler 
wing opened Monday night’s scoring at 1:35 of the first pen 
riod. Edmonton won the National Hockey League game, 7-fL 


get there. 

“You can’t take one game and 
say it makes or breaks a season or a 
career,” Kenny Smith insisted Sat- 
urday. “You can't measure people, 
or growth, or any of the other 
things, based on winning or losing 
one game. But people do that." 

They do indeed. Matt Doherty, 
who played on North Carolina's 
national cha mp ion ship team in " 
1982 before graduating in 1984, 
was at the game Saturday. When he 
saw Syracuse’s 29-12 rebounding 
edge at halftime, Ms first reaction 
was pure instinct: “How can you 
let dot happen to you when you’re 
only 40 minutes from the Final 
Four? If there's ever a game you 
suck it up for, it's one like this." 

Boebeim, criticized for years be- 
cause of a mediocre NCAA record, 
tried to shrug off the importance of 
the victory for Mm Saturday. Tm 
□o better a coach today than I was 
yesterday,” he said. “But because 
so much em phasis is put on win- 
ning, people will perceive me to be 
a better coach. OJC, if that's the 
case, HI take it Tire had it the other 
way long enough.” 

The other way is to what-if your- 
self all summer. North Carolina will 
always see Kenny Smith’s three- 
point shot that could have tied the 
Syracuse game rimming out; 
Georgetown wfll remember Provi- 
dence’s amaring blitz inside; LSU 
{which made the Final Four in 1986) 
wiD recall Rick Calloway’s rebound 
basket and Nikita Wilson's miss; 
Iowa will see Kevin Gamble’s mis- 
guided pass to Brad Lohaus. 

Wilson, whose shot that bounced 
off the rim would have put LSU into 
the Final Four, said it best: “Getting 
to the Final Four is the best feeling 
in the world. This is the worst" 




Transition 


BASH BALL. 

i B i rtaw Unn 

CHICAGO— Wohrad Jifflo Cruz, second 
baseman, lor nw purpose of iMra him Ms 
unconditional release. 

CLEVELAND— Rotoased Dennis Lamp 
and Kurt KepsNre. pu ttier s . Sent Andy Aihm- 
mvcatdMri Bryan OeHcers, Kant Murphy. 
Jeff KoJswvSCDtt Roberts. John Farrell and 
□an Schulze, utteherK n em ar do Brno and 
Mlauel Romm. outfMder* and Eddie WTV 
llams, MMder.to Its adnoMeapuB comp tor 
reasNanmmt. 

TORONTO— OpMcnad NcMod Ur taro sre- 
ond baseman, to Syracuse of tne I ntematlonal 
League. 

NatMaai League 

CINCINNATI— Ptacad Nick Esasky, first 
baseman, on the Ztttav a lso M a ri mu. 

SAN DIEGO— A n l ot ted Sandy Alomar Jr. 
catcher; Rcndy Asadoar, infMder; Joe 
Bltker, Candy Sierra, and Brian Snyder, attch- 
ers. ml Ronaetl Byars and Scott Parsons, 
outfMdan, to Its motor Mamie complex. 

BASKETBALL 

Mattonal Ba um dl AmottaHea 

PHOENIX— Placed Wtniam Bad tent cen- 
ter, on the Inhered IM. ActWatad Grant Gan- 
drazidc. guora. 

SEATTLE— signed Edffle Johnson, guora, 
for the remainder of the saaron. 

FOOTBALL 

NaflaeM ro o lB a B league 

DALLAS— Agreed to terms ertth Ray Alex- 
ander, mMi receiver, or a throe rear con- 
tract. 

HOCinr 

Notional Hockey uweuo 

EDMONTON — RneaHetf Normond La- 
combe end Mike Mailer, rWrt vUrbs. from 
Nava Scotia of the American Hockey League. 

MONTREAL— Recoiled Vincent RJandeou, 
goaUe. from Shertirooke of the American 
Hockey League- 

NEW JERSEY— Recalled Tim Lenardon. 
center, from Maine of the American Hockey 


COLLEGE 

EASTERN MONTANA— Announced the 
roslgnattan of Pat Dauotess. basketball coa- 
ch. 

ILLfNOISCHfCAGO-Plrod Willie urn* 
bask e tball coattt 

INDIANAPOLIS Announced the co nt r act 
of BUI Keller, basketball coach, will not be 

JACKSONVILLE— Named oanaid O. Ja- 
cobs athletic director. 

LIVINGSTONE— Nomad Wtlltom Spencer 
football coocjl 

MARI5T— Announced the roslgnalloni of 
Rich Urfze. wsfctant mom soccer coach,** 
Tom Sutherland, assistant women* Basket- 
ball coach. 

MISSISSIPPI STr-N Om ed Romle Gray 
football defensive cwnHnotar. 

NEW MEXICO— Promoted John Edward 
Koanla msocJoM d irwtor m amtaNci. to attt- 
lottc director. 

PITTSBURGH— Homed BIB Meyers foot- 
ball offarafua line cnattc 

SOUTH ALABAMA— Plred MBe* Hanks, 
basketball coach. 

STANFORD— Named Gary Gannon Hgiit 

end am offensive line coach. 

TEXAS CHRISTIAN ■Na m e d Motto bos- 
VetboU coach. 

UTICA— Announced trail Lent Costello, 
cnarahas nesionait effect Ivo June 

^WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY— Named 

Kmt woody football cooeft. 


Exhibition Baseball 

• ' Monday’* Results 
SL Louis •> Cincinnati 2 ‘ 

N.Y. MMt A PMIodotohla 1 
Chicago Wltfl* so* 7. Kansas CJh> 2 
U« Aonefci a Houston 1 
Montroat ft M.Y. Yankees J 
PHtoburvit i Tews fl 
Toronto & Oeffltir 2 . 

Cleveland a, Seattle * 

MlheoUkoeH OakKmd t 
CatHomla L Chicago Cubs & W hudnu 
Baltimore la Boston 7 , 

Minnesota &, Houston (ss) 3 
San Fnmdseo IX San Dloao 1 ■ 


Basketball 


Hockey 


NBA Leaders 

(Tbrongb Mar ch 211 

TEAM OFFENSE 

O PL 

LA Lakers U *011 

Porttand M 8007 

Dallas a 78SZ 

Denver M 7WM 

Barton M 7704 

Seattle M 7807 

Golden SL M 7Sn 

Detroit U> 7518 

Atlanta M 74M 

Milwaukee » 7646 

Phoenix 67 7321 

Socra m onta 68 7425 

New Jersey 48 7383 

Utah 67 7323 

PhUodetaWa 67 7W 

San Antonio 68 7261 

Houston 68 7236 

Indiana 67 7TU 

Wa rt itnoton 66 7013 

LA aiPPOn 66 6906 

Chicago 68 7ioi 

Oovrlond 69 7189 

New York 67 enu 

TEAM DEFENSE 

g no. 

Atlanta 68 6 W 

ChlcaBO 68 7099 

Houston U 7IS6 

Boston 68 7229 

Philadelphia 67 7147 

Indiana 67 7155 

Milwaukee 78 7476 

Utah 67 7167 

Derrall 66 7068 

Washington 66 7106 

Now York S7 7217 

Cleveland 69 746* 

LA Lakers 68 7357 

Donas 67 7423 

Son Antonia 68 7610 

New Jersey 68 7678 

Seattle 69 77*4 

Phoenix 67 7«os 

Portland 68 7731 

S a c ra mento 68 7740 

Golden SI. 68 7743 

LA Cnaoers 66 7602 

Denver 68 au2 


MMotone, wash. 

FMd Goal 

McHalo, Bos. 
Barkley, pttfl. 
Glbnara SJL 
OonaMsan, Dafl. 

AbduKlabbor, LAL 
Berry, SJL 
Parish. Bos. 
B-Wllllocnj. NJ. 
Johnson, Port. 
Nance. Phoa 


59 470 481 1421 24.1 
Perc s otooe 

FG PGA PCt 
711 1161 .612 
465 785 J92 
2M 488 492 
230 428 594 
477 833 -373 
295 5M J67 
499 »0 J61 
430 772 ^7 
<18 754 JB4 
436 79* .549 


NHL Leaders 


(Through March to 

SCORING 


GOALTENDING 

(Empty paois la pu re n ttmsesl 

Mr M SI Aw 


Barkley. PML 
Oakley, CM. 

B. Williams, nj. 
Donaldson. DaU. 
Laimbeer. Dot. 
MJWalono. Wartr. 
Cage, lac 
O lalvwaiv Hou. 
LSmlttv G-S- 
Parlstv Bos. 


Johnson, LAL 
Floyd, Ga. 
Thomas. DeL 
Riven. Alt 
Porter. Port. 
Them, Sac. 
Harper. DaU. 

Stockton. Utah 

Lever. Den. 
pMeks. PML 


G Off Def Tat Aw 
57 309 515 824 UJ 

68 336 645 B81 13J) 

68 273 586 899 1X6 

67 233 579 812 111 

66 207 571 778 1 LB 

59 » 402 687 11A 

66 295 469 764 11,6 

61 255 451 786 11-6 

66 20 431 720 ML9 

68 224 506 730 187 

Assists 

G 1*0- Aw. 
66 821 04 
68 714 HL5 
66 660 1O0 
68 676 9-9 

66 587 BJ 
65 SSI 84 
62 514 U 

67 551 87 

68 548 77 

65 50S 7J 


Gretzky, Edm 
KuttL Edm 
Lmnliiux. Pah 
Mossier. Edm 
Hawerchuk, Wpb 
O ccarollL Min 
Bourque, Bas 
Kerr, PW 
Yzerman, Del 
Gflmour. SIL 
Goulet, One 
Poddutmv, NYR 


G A Pts Pin 
61 115 176 26 
52 53 105 31 

52 48 100 55 
35 65 100 73 
46 49 95 54 
51 43 94 77 
19 69 88 36 

53 34 87 57 
30 57 87 43 
33 S3 86 58 
41 « 84 59 
39 « 84 47 


NHL Standings 

WALES CONFERENCE 
Patrick Division 

W L T PtS OF OA 
x-PhUadelPtria 44 23 7 95 294 m 

NY Islander! 33 30 10 76 254 2S3 

Washington 33 32 9 73 258 263 

NY Rangers 32 34 8 72 287 258 

Pittsburgh 28 39 11 67 Z» 268 


x -Hartford 
x -Montreal 
x-Boston 
Quebec 

Buffalo 


33 32 9 73 2» 263 

32 34 8 72 287 288 

28 39 11 67 276 268 

26 41 6 SB 263 337 

Adams Division 

40 27 7 57 265 245 

35 29 10 80 249 229 

35 33 7 77 278 256 

27 36 10 6* 234 252 

27 39 7 61 252 *77 


NBA Standings 


EASTERN CONFERENCE 
Atlantic Division 

W L PCL OB 


CAMPBB LL CONFERE NCE 
NorrtS Division 

W L T Pts GF GA 
Detroit 33 33 10 76 248 258 

SI. Louis 28 31 U 70 254 272 

ChlcnBO 28 34 12 68 266 284 

Minnesota 29 36 9 67 276 2S9 


Fraesa 

Hoxiaii 

Reach 

PhtlodoipWa {51 
Howard 
Roy 

Montreal (Ml 
weeks 

Liut 

Hartford (S3 
BcrtMaume 
Reddick 
Penney 

Winnipeg €4) 

SL Laurant 
Han ton 
Uribrest 

5 total 

Detroit {71 
Hrwtav 
Smith 

NY istanden (31 
Gasset In 
Mo larch uk 
5ev igny 

Quebec (41 
Keans 
Rantord 
Rtuoln 
OasAataUs 
Romano 

Bossea CO 
Fuhr 
Maoa 

Edmoatoa O) 
Lome) in 
Vernon 
DMswelJ 

Cotpary (71 
RhMrln 
Meiache 


Jordan. ChL 
Enetbto Don. 
Wilkins. Art. 
Bfrtt Bat. 
Vandaweatie. I 
McHahv Bas. 
MpihTo, Dab. 
Ellis. Sea. 
Jahneoa LAL 


INDIVIDUAL 

Stortag 

9 PO FT Pt» AW 
68 910 681 2511 3A9 

68 810 334 1977 29.1 

65 671 496 1851 285 

<0 603 340 1625 27.1 

TT. 66 675 395 1777 269 

68 711 386 1808 2U 

66 665 368 1740 2M 

69 651 325 16W 244 

66 566 453 1592 24.1 


lo-Bortort 

50 

11 

JX 

_ 

Toronto 28 39 

e 

62 

PhlkxfcHptria 

38 

30 

SH 

12 

Sneyttw Dtvtsloo 


Woshtofiton 

35 

O 

J92 

1416 

x-Edmonlon 46 22 

5 

97 

Mow York 

21 

47 

309 

29 

x-Caloarv 44 28 

2 

» 

New Jersey 

20 

48 

3M 

30 

x -Wlnnlpeg 38 28 

1 

84 


Central Dtvtrton 



Las Angolas 28 37 

8 

64 

x-AHonto 

46 

22 

474 

— . 

Vancouver 25 41 

1 

58 

x-Detratr 

45 

27 

472 

to 

(xxtosdwr dnw toon 



x-AUiwnukee 

42 

20 

400 

s 

MONDAY'S RESULTS 

Chlesoa 

34 

34 

400 

12 

Edmonton 


1 

Intoona 

33 

35 

.485 

13 

New Jersey 


2 

Cleveland 

26 

43 

J77 

20W 

Tikkanen (331. KruaheMvaici <157.4 


IN 8 0 167 
355* 173 1 192 
739 36 0 252 

4475 222 1 2J5 
1938 93 1 288 

2556 128 1 299 
4584 229 2 3JB 
1247 68 1 327 

3236 172 4 327 
4483 245 5 Mi 
I6U 83 I 305 
2540 137 0 134 
327 25 O 4J9 

44*5 249 1 131 
342 16 0 2*1 
1792 *8 1 3JB 

21? 12 0 329 

2217 25 1 3J8 

4570 » 2 139 
2346 131 8 345 
2110 119 1 US 
•456 253 1 Ml 
1534 82 0 321 

2760 155 1 137 
144 11 0 458 

4438 251 1 Ml 
1821 99 0 326 

1994 113 3 3L40 
513 29 0 339 

97 7 0 4J3 

60 6 0 600 
4465 Hi I Ml 

2063 118 0 343 
2399 133 O 347 
tm 254 8 347 
1511 79 2 3.14 

2881 171 I 1S6 
60 6 O 600 

4453 343 3 354 
762 42 8 321 

2283 125 0 340 
1430 87 0 363 

113 8 0 425 


(Meiottte, Romano 
pttt sbwy h (61 
Mason 
Peelers 
Jenson 

Washtogtea (71 
Wormier 
Ml Men 
9L Laois 15) 
Cloutier 
Barrasoa 
Pupea 
Buffalo (5) 
5koradensU 
Sawve 
Bannerman 
CMcnoe (U 
Takko 
Beaupre 
Sands 

Minnesota (0 
Froose 

VanMosbrouck 
Scott 
Soefaert 
NY fuooera (61 
Brodeur 
Caprice 
Gamble 
Young 

Vancouver ( 5 ) 
Better 
Wreaaett 
Bernhardt 

Toronto (SJ 

Mclorwon 

Eliot 

Janecvk 

Jenson 

Las Anaetes (I) 
McLean 
Blllinoton 
Terra rl 
Qtevrier 
Frioson 

NOW Jonw (5) 


ehored shutout Jon. 23) 
45M 28 I U6 
2295 127 0 322 
1813 102 0 US 
325 27 0 494 

4486 263 0 346 
2226 131 2 153 
2177 131 0 341 
4403 SC7 0 344 
2095 129 0 347 
2268 139 1 344 
45 5 0 442 

44M 277 1 325 
90 3 0 £00 

2435 145 1 357 
1979 135 0 449 
4904 275 1 321 
1983 116 0 351 
2259 147 I MS 
163 12 0 442 

4250 251 1 388 
1295 72 0 334 

2475 14* 0 344 
65 5 O 442 

675 58 0 5.16 

4516 272 8 383 
2732 165 1 342 
1270 82 0 187 

60 « 0 4J» 

420 36 0 580 

4482 394 1 344 
1749 107 2 347 
2665 778 0 401 
20 3 0 9 80 

*491 294 2 350 
2474 149 1 341 
1304 94 1 433 

428 34 0 446 

in b o us 

4438 SOS’ 2 4.18 
160 10 0 345 

887 64 O 433 

286 21 § 441 

2899 214 0 443 
130 16 O 7J8 

43«1 SM I 444 


BlancpaiN 


NCAA Leaders 


Cnvnmn Regional FtoOM 
SCORING 

ream G Pts aw 

Bitty Donovan, Provi d ence 4 106 264 

Reggio Williams. Gaeraefewm 4 104 XU 
Ron? SeltolY. Syracuse 4 104 240 

Arman GUHom. UNLV 4 103 258 

Feimfs Dembo. WYomina 3 84 284 

JJL RfU. North Carolina 4. 84 2Wt 

Danny Manama. Kansas 3 77 25.7 

vonton MotcwsH, FtortHa 3 77 2*3 

David Riven. Notre Dame 3 74 247 
Jim Farmer. Alabama 3 72 248 

REBOUNDING 

Plater, Team U R*b An 

Derrick Cuttetian, Syracuse 4 42 10J 

Armen Gilliam, UNLV 4 42 10J 

Row Setkatr. Svraa/st 4 37 M 

Ricky Collawav, Indiana * 34 85 

RtHto WUHains. Georgetown 4 33 U 

Horvev Grant Oklahoma J 32 10J- 

Tim Perry. Temple 2 28 Uffl 

JJL Reid, North CaroUno * 20 *8 

joe WoH North Carolina 4 2fr 7J> 

FerniM Dentn. Wyoming 3 » »a 

Eric Ltcknor, woming 3 27 W 

ASSISTS 

Player, Tooat Q Art Avg 

Mark VtodfcAINLV 4 43 IU 

Kenny 5mlltv Norih Carolina 4 36 M 

Sherman Dowto*. Syroaat 4 36 W 

BUht Dooovaai ProvklenC* 4 35 . 88 
Oliver Brown, Loutahna St. 4 24 u 

Soon Dent, Wvomblp 3 21 7J9 

KeHh Smart. Hrtk» 4 n 5j 

Steve Alfari, Indiana 4 28 M 

Cedric Hunter. Kansas 3 W AS 

Bobby Winston, Georgetovm 4 18 45 


WESTERN CONFERENCE 
Midwest DfvfSMa 

W L PCL GB 
«- Dallas 45 23 462 — 

Utah 38 30 .559 7 

Ho u ston 36 33 J22 TVS 

Denver 29 40 420 lew 

San Antonia 25 43 MS to 

Sacramento so 48 AM 25 

PorttJC DfvMoo 

xhla. Lakars 54 U jn — 

x -Portkmd 42 26 MM 12 

Seattle 3S 35 J00 20 

Golden state 34 34 J00 2D 

Phoenix M <1 JSt 29H 

LA. aippera II 55 .167 <2 

U-cttoCbod ptoyoft spun 

MONDAY'S RESULTS 
WMt Un e t ua 21 St 19 26- 92 

Indiana 31 21 18 98-181 

SHpanoWch 8-15 ll-M 27, Person 7-14 2-2 16; 
Vbteenl 11-20 M & Adams M 4-7 14 Re- 
beaadtaWaeMagtan49(CafUage9lj Indiana 
66f7torsoaIH.A8rt5t8.- WMtongt ongg(Whort- 
lev 9); indtano 30 (Person 7). 

Dodos 21 30 24 28— 183 

Ph nmtM phkl 21 22 31 26-480 

BtakoHrt 152284 3APtrMns48 64 14; Bark- 
ley WH? 45 24. MtsCormlek M4 6-10 22. Ro- 
beoods; Drtkis46( Wockmm Tanker 8); PhBo- 
drtpMa m (BwUey an. AssMb: OoBn 22 
lHorpsr,D«A»71; PMtodetaNsat (lMneatoU). 
Seattle 29 31 15 25 to-TJ* 

New YM 9 21 21 16 M— 121 

MTOonM M-36 tM64a Chamben IMS MMt 
G, wndns 130(69 32. 0rr6-U 88 3B. Rebeutds: 
Seams 45 ILUfcr 15); New Ytok 59 (Wrtstit 9J. 
Assists: Seattle 34 {McMIHan 111; New York If 
(Hendersai 61. 

Dotrolf es 28 as 21 — 114 

Hearten 3» 21 38 is— ill 

DanSey 9-lS 7-10 2S, Thomas 6-16 M 21; 

OtatuiKm 164164 3MMd 5-13 55 U. Rebounds: 
Detroit 63|LB*tomr 19); Hoostenfl (OMumxi 
13). Assists: DttrahW rmenxn W ; Houston 34 
fRrtd 7). 

Denver 22 31 38 28—118 

Vft* H 37 32 25— 122 

Malone 1433 57 31 Griffith 6-12 64 29; Welker 
1M8 0-1639, easftth 1M4M22, Lever 81866 H 
Babns Ms : Denver flOIteraama 12); Utch54 

(Matone Dl. Assists: Dernier 18 (Lwere); Utah 

27 ( Green m. 


Ruataokrinen 2 13), Mailer 1 1 1, Anderson (31 ); 
Maclean (2».Verbeek (Stl.cnernomcB (41. 
Muller (94). SuKIman 02 1. Driver 16). Shots 
an goal: Edmonton (on BHilnetoni 13-134— 
35; New Jersey (on MOOO) 9-12-9— ML 
51 LauN 8 1 *— 8 

MMwfla 1 1 3—5 

Hunter (35). Gllmour (34), Federico 2 (18). 
Reeds (9). PaslatMskl US). Fiockitart tie). 
Meagher (18); Acton (16), MocLcllon (3f), 
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Page 18 


INTERNATIONAL HERALD TRIBUNE* WEDNESDAY, MARCH 25, 1987 


1 V*’*®* 

.1 !• ... srart 


OBSERVER 


people 


CBS on the Firing Line 

By Russell Baker most of the staff forgot their “p 


N EW YORK — People in the 
news business (end to forest 


news business tend to forget 
it's a business, so when something 
Like the firings at CBS News jolts 
them back to reality, they respond 
with shock and rage. 

Psychologically, this is entirely 
natural and explains why news 
people have given the CBS story 
such extensive coverage. Press crit- 
ics are saying the coverage is out of' 
proportion to the numbers fired, 
particularly in a labor market 
where other shops are Tiring thou- 
sands, but this misses a bizarre 
point which press critics should be 
the first to grasp: 

News people cannot resist the 
delusion that they are different. 
Few can bring themselves to ac- 
knowledge that they are hired 
hands who become expendable 
whenever the boss scowls at the 
bottom line. Here are people whose 
work is supposed to be the tireless 
pursuit of truth, yet they cannot 
resist lying to themselves about 
their own situation. 

The disproportionate coverage 
given to a couple of hundred firings 
at CBS is not excessive from the 
□ewsfolks' viewpoint, because it is 
not about firings: it is about an 
assault on a mass delusion. 

□ 


I first noticed the power of this 
delusion 40 years ago in Baltimore 
when 1 was a kid reporter active in 
trying to organize the newsroom in 
a labor union. Resistance from the 
graybeards was fierce, and not sole- 
ly because they regarded me as a 
youthful sorehead who had suc- 
cumbed to Bolshevism because my 
pay was only 530 a week. 

Thar fiercer objection was that 
being news people meant they were 
“professionals." And professional 
people, they argued, did not join 
labor unions. 

Fortunately, the boss was a real- 
ist, so he didn't know- the depth of 
his reporters' self-deception or un- 
derstand that this was bis most 
powerful weapon against the 
union. Talking one day about who 
was entitled to more than sweat- 
shop pay, he made the mistake of 
singling out a half-dozen faithful 
old-timers who had been with the 
paper forever and telling union ne- 
gotiators it was outrageous to ask 
him to pay these “aged incompe- 
tents’' more than S60 a week. 

After that was duly publicized. 


most of the staff forgot their “pro- 
fessionalism” long enough to join 
the union, but doubtless resumed 
thinking of themselves as “profes- 
sionals” once the chilly exposure to 
reality wore off. 

If the illusion of being something 
more elegant than hired hands is 
even stronger in the era of the CBS 
firings than it was in the age of $30- 
a-week pay envelopes, it is surely 
because or the oceans of malarkey 
spoken and written about “the 
power of the media” since politics 
turned into television. 

When yon are constantly mari- 
nated in declarations, accusations 
and denunciations, aO to the effect 
that you are part of a powerful 
organism — “the media" — that 
settles the fate of the mighty, that 
makes and unmakes governments, 
that dispenses cruel justice or 
grams quixotic mercy at a whim — 
you might naturally start thinking 
of youraelf as having godlike char- 
acteristics. You might understand- 
ably fail to notice that you have 
more in common with disemploya- 
ble steel workers in the Rust Belt 
than with the buccaneers of Wall 
Street or even with doctors and 
lawyers. 

The conservative right has done 
heroic work in creating the illusion 
of the amazingly “powerful me- 
dia.” In the right’s “Catalogue of 
Simple Explanations of Everything 
That’s Wrong With the World,” 
one of the biggest entries is “the 
media.’' 

When a rightist says “The media 
did it,” he is referring to what he 
perceives as a conspiracy of the 
three network television news de- 
partments, The New York Times, 
The Washington Post, Time maga- 
zine and Newsweek. Rightists who 
wanted to strangle the media mon- 
ster used to talk abont gaining con- 
trol of CBS so they could become 
“Dan Rather’ s boss.” 

Not surprisingly, all this encour- 
aged news people everywhere, buz 
especially those of the designated | 
“powerful media," to settle deeper 
into the delusion that they lived a 
far world away from luckless steel 
workers and mill hands who ruin 
the boss’s bottom line. Then Laur- 
ence A. Tisch bought CBS and 
woke everybody up. Tisch is a hotel 
man. Chambermaids don’t kid 
themselves. He must have thought 
news people were at least as smart. 

New York Times Service 


Nicaragua 
Relives Its 


Yankee Past 


By Stephen Kinzer 

New York Times Service 


G RANADA, Nicaragua — 
This graceful and dignified 


YJ This graceful and dignified 
city, founded in 1524, is the only 
place in Nicaragua where one 
feels in touch with Latin Ameri- 
ca’s colonial past. Sculpted iron 
balconies protrude from white- 
washed buildings, and strong ce- 
dar beams support elegant 
ehim> iff no minating the plaza is 
the enormous building that once 
housed the Granada Social Oub. 
which in bygone days was the 
gathering place for Nicaragua's 
highest society. 

The building came into govern- 
ment hands following the Sandin- 
ist takeover in 1979. and today it 
is bong used as headquarters for 
an international crew making 
what its American backers hope 
will be a Him that profoundly in- 
fluences perceptions of Nicara- 
gua in the United States. 

Downstairs, in what was once a 
private salon beside the vast mar- 
ble dance floor, seamstresses are 
making costumes and carpenters 
are building sets. Upstairs, the 
film's British-born director, Alex 
Cox, whose credits include “Repo 
Man” and “Sid and Nancy,” 
works on storyboards when not 
consulting with the Americans, 
Britons, Sp aniards. Mexicans and 
Nicaraguans with whom he 
works. 

Cox says he wants to make a 
statement against U.S. policy in 
Central America, specifically its 
support for the Nicaraguan anti- 
government forces, the contras. 
"The U.S. government, with the 
support of my own government, is 
aiding and abetting a stupid, 
pointless massacre of people who 
don't mean them any harm at alL 
We are responsible for this. It’s 
our tax dollars.” 

Cox's film is base d on William 
Walker, a 19th-century adventur- 
er boro in Tennessee, who led a 
force of Americans to Nicaragua 
in 1 855, took over the country and 


was inaugurated president in 
1857 before bring executed by fir- 
ing squad in 1860 at the age of 36. 
In N icaragua, be is regarded as 
the epitome of the thoughtlessly 
brutal Yankee who wreaks de- 
struction under the illusion that 
be is spreading democracy. 

Nicaraguan officials reviewed 
the script before giving permis- 
sion for filming ; and representa- 
tives of the state-run Nicaraguan 
Cinema Institute are working 
closely with the filmmakers All 
involved share a view that U.S. 
policy toward Nicaragua is fun- 
damentally immo ral. “Walker” is 
scheduled for release late this 
year. 

The title role is played by Ed 
Harris, who portrayed John 
Glenn in “The Right Stuff." Like 
the director and many o there in- 
volved in the project, Harris is 
working for a substantially re- 
duced fee because he agrees with 
the film’s political perspective. 
The budget is a relatively modest 
$6 million or 57 million. 

“1 1*5 a fascinating story and a 
great character,” Harris said. 
“Walker came down here in the 
name of democracy, without any 
understanding of this country or 
its history or social customs. 
Comparing that to what's hap- 
pening today. I have a small sus- 
picion there is a point to be made. 
Hopefully people who see the 
movie wfll enjoy the ride, and by 
the end they will have been hit by 
something that causes them to 
think.” 

Cox has a reputation for origi- 
nality, and “Walker" is very un- 
like conventional historical dra- 
ma. The script, written by Andy 
Wtirlitzer, who also wrote “Two 
Lane Blacktop” and “Pat Garrett 
and BQly the Kid.” is full of 
quirky time warps and striking 
juxtapositions that compare 
Walker's quixotic crusade to the 
Reagan administration's cam- 
paign against ihe Sandinist gov- 
ernment “I hope we can play it 






IW Mwgov'Th. No-'Yo* Term 

Director Cox (left) with Ed Harris, who plays the adventurer William Walker. 


EodKnieed Wonts 
To Store Some Fame 

The former motorcyck stuj| 
man Evd Smew* ***& 
yi of his fame tack w **g-“ 
Butte, Montana. KMe*}- 
gave up stunts after a . 

dent, wants to tnni one of BuBes 

abandoned schools into an two 
Knievd Hall of Faroe mcottmt 
One person who will probably bm 
visit it is a man in Moses Lag. 
Washington, who punched ibeJor- 
mer daredevil in a restaurant tar 
Witnesses to the fight Sunday said 

a local apparently struck him with- 
out provocation after offering un- 
solicited criticism of knieveTs cy* 
cling skills. . 

D 

The English composer H®****®*; 
Bmrisde has woo the S15OX0g^ 
Grawemeyar Award for Compoa- 
tkro for his pp«a “The hiask of- 
Orpheus.” The award « given by 
the University of LomsvrBe (Ken- 
tucky) in r e cognition of outstand- 
ing achievement by a composer. 
Birtwistle. 53, fives in southern 
France. ‘The Mask of Orpheus,” 
given its premiere m London last 
May. is a four-hour wort featuring 
masked singers, mooes and dec- 
tronk muse. It was selected from 
9S pieces submitted from 20 coun- 
tries. : - 






straight,” said Harris, “but there 
are certain situations, certain 
lines where, if the audience is not 
laughing, they’re not getting it.” 

Hie film’s producer, Ed Press- 
man, is also producing “WaD 
Street” the forthcoming film by 
Oliver Stone, who wrote and di- 
rected “Platoon.” 


Perhaps no nongovernmental 
project in the eight years of San- 
dinist rule in Nicaragua has been 
as fully supported by the govern- 
ment as the production of “Walk- 
er,” which is scheduled to contin- 
ue until the end of April. When 
set designers asked that telephone 
poles in central Granada be re- 
moved. the poles were removed. 
When helicopters and explosives 
were needed, the army agreed to 
provide them- In a country where 
the distributiou of wood is tightly 
controlled by the government. 
1 5,000 sheets of plywood and tons 
of planking are being assigned to 
the production. Much of the 
wood will ultimately be destroyed 
when the filmmakers re-create the 
burning of Granada, one of 
Walker’s best known deeds. 


The man coordinating Nicara- 
guan cooperation with the makers 
of “Walker” is Carlos Alvarez, a 
Chilean-born official of the Nica- 
raguan Cmana Institute. Alvarez 
recently invited a visitor to Asese. 
a cove near Granada, where Mex- 
ican carpenters were supervising 
the construction of a waterfront 
town that will be used to portray 
San Francisco, the place where 
W alker and his 58 “immortals” — 
as the popular press in the United 
States called them — embarked 
for Nicaragua in 1855. An old 
cargo vessel is bang turned into a 
model of Walker’s ship, the Vesta. 

“Before deciding to cooperate 
with the makin g of this film,** 
Alvarez said, “we assessed the 
script from a political and aes- 
thetic perspective. Walker is a 
very controversial personality, 
and it was important that history 
be told in a correct way. In this 
film, you don’t find backward 
Central Americans who cower in 
the face of Ram bo- type fighters. 
You come to understand how ri- 
diculous and absurd it is to think 
of an Americas invasion of Nica- 
ragua." 


Walker was a dedicated news- 
paper editor and idealistic lawyer 
who considered a political career 
? »r» d yearned for a life of quiet 
domesticity. But something 
snapped inside h™ when the only 
woman he ever loved, Ellen Mar- 
tin, died in New Orleans during a 
cholera epidemic in 1849. Ac- 
cording to one biographer. Walk- 
er’s “quiet, serious, gentle and 
kind” nature quickly changed, 
and he became “melancholy, oc- 
casionally almost paranoid in his 
behavior, and obsessed with a 
. longing for reckless and daring 
action regardless erf the conse- 
quences.” EHen Martin, who had 
impaired hearing, will be played 
by Mariee Matiin. an Academy 
Award nominee for her role in 
“Children of a Lesser dod." 


Ofiver Sfcme,whodireeied “Pb- 
loon,” says the New York financial 

gfftaMwhment seems lobevroniiiA 

about what he will dbin teupco«5 
ing movie. ‘"WyTStreet*’ -He S 
be plans to tae “* lot of authentic 

brokers pkiying tbsmsebre m the 
film which wffl star Mii.fiirl Deag- 

las, ChzrSe Skeen and DM7! Han- 
nah. Stone, no mi n at ed foe Otora 
for both “Ratoon” tad “Salva- 
dor.” said he co-vtooto th* “Wifi 
Street” screenplay .-with -Stanley 
Weber "even before the ffraaf 
Boesky thing hit.” 


"Walker was a guy who was 
completely oat of touch with real- 
ity. who thought he was acting on 
Christian principles but who 
blinded hiosdf to the fact that he 
was slaughtering the people he 
came here to regenerate." Cox 
said. “That’s something to think 
about” 


A woman who was- fired by 
Coca-Cola over her krve affair with 
a man employed by its an* rival, 
Pepa-Cob, has been compensated 
by her former employees in an evu- 
of-court settlement. Amanda Coa&r 
Kb was dmmfafe 5600.000 iri&rfJj 1 
ages for hertfisfflaS^She fef in 
low with DmUtionkfia, whofcft 
Coca-Cola to jam Pepsi. The com- 
pany gave Amanda three options: 
10 breafr off hweagagenfflt. per- 
suade. her flanofc to return, or re- 
sign. She refused. \- 


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BJROKAN INVESTIGATIONS far 
taie • mdifitry • bonki • msena 
ondlavyers am 1962. 
rw estmetas & ful da ti e tion. 
Phone, wite or lelez for our 

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Vcm leyenberghlaai 199 A 
lOBgGG A w dailiei f-TheNettier famA 
Phene + 3120420237 Tit 18261 NL 
Telefax +31ja<25854 



CATTLE (SUNG INVESTMENT 
. SOUTH AMBBCA 
P ”* ™! oyvbusneii on. 


dtea iraoged 125 pnme acre cade 
rtmares wifi 120 head, pasture aid 


num. Buyer may . 


— wL, pasture and 
2£flSj, *ySems. Total mv iu t u ie iii 
PWlOp. fapeded (TOl) 10% per 


SSiEfiST*®* 


299671 WYDS UK 



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WORLDWIDE 

«KINBS'CB«RB 


2-^rtelaCretaMC^S^ 
Tet 93 S 00 


“H tabu more fire, epooi 
*o run on office” 


p ARB ADDRESS. 
S«re 19571.SJ.Bta 









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Td 4359 4704. Tie 6423)4. 


FU3RB4CE CVF1CE SKVTd 


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FINANCIAL SERVICES 

03- 42 72 U, fa 7B949 agent Mtxiqg- 


er G. ReUev, formuote/ainydlL 
cer.worlriwirin Eflrfifahedl9».Pcist 
toJenx3banetonjst4,N-0154QJo ]. 


I7SEX OPTIONS 5ERV1CB 
The first 57. Opfam SeArere* 
SM Compafibto 

Lgi fireKtepr 
■0.5. Gtetnamr: 07181-82820 
\-OS. Serfa te l rewl 032-222013 
I O-5. Gigtnl 01-248-1*42 




OFFTaS FOR RENT 


Center of 


EXCBTONAL AREA 

NL 






^SOO+tax/mth 

pace rr*4«W. 


^WSpre BT 


^Priceindutfa: 

CL ‘OtedpInebM 


£*-> 


2LSE1 grange 

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wROPEAN 


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